US8923788B1 - Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator - Google Patents

Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US8923788B1
US8923788B1 US14/089,515 US201314089515A US8923788B1 US 8923788 B1 US8923788 B1 US 8923788B1 US 201314089515 A US201314089515 A US 201314089515A US 8923788 B1 US8923788 B1 US 8923788B1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
frequency
transition
signal
dco
time
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Active
Application number
US14/089,515
Inventor
David Cousinard
Cao-Thong Tu
Miljan Vuletic
Lydi Smaini
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Cavium International
Marvell Asia Pte Ltd
Original Assignee
Marvell International Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Marvell International Ltd filed Critical Marvell International Ltd
Priority to US14/089,515 priority Critical patent/US8923788B1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US8923788B1 publication Critical patent/US8923788B1/en
Assigned to CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL reassignment CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: MARVELL INTERNATIONAL LTD.
Assigned to MARVELL ASIA PTE, LTD. reassignment MARVELL ASIA PTE, LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL
Active legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03LAUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION, OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
    • H03L7/00Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
    • H03L7/06Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
    • H03L7/08Details of the phase-locked loop
    • H03L7/099Details of the phase-locked loop concerning mainly the controlled oscillator of the loop
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03JTUNING RESONANT CIRCUITS; SELECTING RESONANT CIRCUITS
    • H03J7/00Automatic frequency control; Automatic scanning over a band of frequencies
    • H03J7/18Automatic scanning over a band of frequencies

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to digital circuits, and in particular, to a circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a communication system 100 that uses digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) 101 to provide a carrier signal for a receiver mixer 103 and a transmitter mixer 104 .
  • DCO digitally controlled oscillator
  • An input radio frequency (RF) signal RFin is amplified by amplifier 105 , demodulated by receiver mixer 103 , and processed by inter-frequency (IF)/baseband processor 102 .
  • IF/baseband processor 102 also provides a signal that transmitter mixer 104 modulates, and amplifier 106 amplifies to produce RF signal RFout.
  • DCO 101 receives a control signal of N-bits and may provide a carrier signal having a frequency f 1 to receiver mixer 103 and to transmitter mixer 104 . DCO 101 uses the digital control signal (N-bits) to adjust the frequency f 1 .
  • the DCO 101 may be adjusted to provide a carrier signal having a new frequency and/or frequency adjustment.
  • DCO control bits adjust the frequency of the DCO 101 in discrete steps and a minimum step of frequency may represent the smallest change of frequency f 1 .
  • the minimum step may be limited by the minimum capacitor values which may be switched internal to DCO 101 .
  • the minimum step may cause a disruption, such as glitches, in the processing of the signal within IF/baseband processor 102 or in a subsequent stage. For example, in FM (frequency modulation) demodulation of an audio signal, these glitches may cause clicking sounds from a speaker.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the effect of a frequency change 202 on an audio signal 204 .
  • FM demodulator 201 receives a FM signal which includes a frequency change 202 over a step 203 .
  • This frequency step 203 may create an audio DC step after demodulation, which causes a glitch 205 in the audio signal 204 .
  • Glitch 205 may cause audible clicks to the user. If the frequency is recalibrated periodically, it may create undesirable audible tones.
  • the present invention includes a method of generating an oscillating signal at different frequencies, the method comprising configuring a digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency, and configuring the digitally controlled oscillator to transition from the first frequency to a second frequency during a transition time period, the second frequency being different than the first frequency.
  • the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals. The time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
  • the time intervals are increased based on a linear ramp.
  • the time intervals are generated in response to a pulse width modulated signal.
  • the method further comprises generating a transition signal and converting the transition signal into a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to activate and deactivate the first frequency and the second frequency.
  • the transition signal is a digital signal that successively increases from a first value to a second value.
  • converting the transition signal into a bit stream comprises processing the digital signal in a sigma-delta modulator.
  • configuring the digitally controlled oscillator to transition includes generating a bit stream, wherein the bit stream comprises pulse width modulated data corresponding to a transition signal, and wherein a selection between a first code corresponding to the first frequency and a second code corresponding to the second frequency is responsive to the bit stream.
  • the present invention includes an electronic circuit comprising a digital controlled oscillator for generating an oscillating signal and a transition controller coupled to the digitally controlled oscillator.
  • the transition controller configures the digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency and transitions the oscillating signal from the first frequency to a second frequency during a transition time period, where the second frequency is different than the first frequency.
  • the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals, where the time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
  • the transition controller includes a digital signal generator to provide a linear ramp to increase the time intervals.
  • the transition controller includes a modulator to provide a pulse width modulated signal, where the time intervals are generated in response to the pulse width modulated signal.
  • the transition controller comprises a digital signal generator to provide a transition signal and a converter to convert the transition signal into a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to activate and deactivate the first frequency and the second frequency.
  • the converter is a sigma delta modulator to convert the transition signal into a bit stream.
  • the transition signal is a digital signal that successively increases from a first value to a second value.
  • the transition controller generates a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to transition, where the bit stream comprises pulse width modulated data corresponding to a transition signal, and a selection between a first code corresponding to the first frequency and a second code corresponding to the second frequency is responsive to the bit stream.
  • the present invention includes a communication system comprising an amplifier to amplify a radio frequency signal, a mixer to demodulate the radio frequency signal, a digital controlled oscillator to provide an oscillating signal to the mixer, and a transition controller coupled to the digitally controlled oscillator.
  • the transition controller configures the digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency and transitions the oscillating signal from the first frequency to the second frequency during a transition time period, the second frequency being different than the first frequency, wherein during the transition time period, the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals, and wherein the time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a conventional communication system that uses a digitally controlled oscillator to provide a carrier signal for a receiver mixer and a transmitter mixer.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the effect of a frequency change on an audio signal.
  • FIG. 3A illustrates a RF communication system
  • FIG. 3B illustrates a timing diagram 310 associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A .
  • FIG. 3C illustrates a transition signal waveform and a corresponding audio signal waveform associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A .
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
  • FIG. 6 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
  • FIG. 3A illustrates a RF communication system 300 .
  • RF communication system 300 includes amplifier 305 , mixer 303 , IF/baseband processor 304 , digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) 301 , and transition controller 302 .
  • Amplifier 305 receives and amplifies signal RFin (e.g., from an antenna).
  • Mixer 303 demodulates RFin by using an oscillating signal from digitally controlled oscillator 301 .
  • the demodulated signal from mixer 303 is received and processed by IF/baseband processor 304 .
  • Transition controller 302 generates a digital signal to configure digitally controlled oscillator 301 .
  • the digitally controlled oscillator 301 may be configured to generate signals at different frequencies and may be configured to transition from a signal having one frequency to a signal having another frequency.
  • FIG. 3B illustrates an example timing diagram 310 associated with the communication system 300 of FIG. 3A .
  • Timing diagram 300 includes waveform f1 showing the activation/deactivation of a first frequency, and waveform f2 showing the activation/deactivation of a second frequency.
  • DCO 301 of FIG. 3A may be configured to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency.
  • DCO 301 may be configured to generate the oscillating signal at a second frequency.
  • the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated for time intervals t1, t2, t3, . . . , tN-2, tN-1, tN.
  • the time intervals successively increase from the beginning of transition period 311 to the end of the transition period 311 .
  • the transition controller may deactivate the first frequency (i.e., the frequency of the signal before the transition) and activate the second frequency (i.e., the frequency of the signal after the transition).
  • the time interval when the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated is small. Accordingly, the average frequency is approximately the first frequency.
  • the time intervals increase. Accordingly, toward the end of the transition period 311 , the time interval when the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated is large. Accordingly, the average frequency is approximately the second frequency.
  • the intervals may increase according to a variety of techniques. In one embodiment, the intervals may be increased based on a transition signal such as a linear ramp, for example. As described below, different transition signals may be used.
  • the time period from the beginning one time interval to the beginning of the next time interval may be constant across the entire transition period, as in some pulse code modulated systems (e.g., tint1 may be the same as time period tint(N ⁇ 1)). Therefore, the time intervals (e.g. t1, t2, etc. . . . ) may correspond to transition signal which has been pulse width modulated as described in more detail below.
  • FIG. 3C illustrates an example transition signal waveform 320 and a corresponding audio signal waveform 330 associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A .
  • transition signal waveform 320 is a linear ramp.
  • Level 321 may correspond to a first frequency and level 323 may correspond to a second frequency.
  • transition signal waveform 320 increases from level 321 to level 323 .
  • Audio signal waveform 330 indicates the effect of a change in frequency on an audio signal envelope 333 after FM demodulation. The deviation of the signal illustrated by 332 is significantly reduced by using the frequency transition techniques described herein as compared with a step frequency change. In comparison with prior art techniques illustrated at 204 and 205 in FIG.
  • the audio signal change is smoother and not as abrupt, which reduces audible noise resulting from the transition.
  • the above transition signal illustrates an increasing transitional waveform, it is to be understood that other embodiments of the present invention may use a transition scheme using successively decreasing time intervals and decreasing transition signals.
  • the examples provided in this specification for increasing time intervals and increasing transitions signals are, therefore, only exemplary.
  • Portion 331 indicates approximately where audio signal waveform 330 is perturbed by the transition signal waveform 320 , and audio signal waveform 330 moves an additional amount 332 .
  • the amount of perturbation of the audio signal waveform 330 may be further reduced by altering the transition signal waveform 320 as indicated by alternative transition signal waveform 324 (shown by dashed line).
  • Alternative transition signal waveform 324 may be associated with a higher order equation such as arctangent, for example.
  • the time intervals of FIG. 3B may be increased successively based on the linear ramp, arctangent, or other monotonically increasing signal used for the transition signal waveform 320 .
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an example electronic circuit 400 for generating an oscillating signal.
  • Electronic circuit 400 includes transition signal generator 401 , modulator 402 , control signal generator 403 , and DCO 404 .
  • Control signal generator 403 may generate control signals, such as digital control signals, to configure DCO 404 to generate an oscillating signal at a first frequency.
  • control signal generator 403 may generate control signals to configure DCO 404 to generate an oscillating signal at a second frequency.
  • the control signal generator 403 may receive inputs from the transition signal generator 401 and modulator 402 to configure DCO 404 to transition from the first frequency to the second frequency.
  • Transition signal generator 401 generates transition signals.
  • the transition signal may be a linear ramp, an arctangent, or a combination of mathematical equations that produce a smooth transition from a first level to a second level.
  • the transition signal generator 401 may generate a digital signal corresponding to a continuous transitional waveform.
  • the transition signal may be a digital signal that successively increases from a first initial value to a second final value with a plurality of intermediate values.
  • the first value may correspond to a first frequency and the second value may correspond to a second frequency.
  • the transition signal generator 401 is a counter, for example.
  • Modulator 402 modulates the transition signal provided by transition signal generator 401 .
  • Modulator 402 may be a pulse width modulator (PWM) such as a sigma delta converter, for example.
  • PWM pulse width modulator
  • Modulator 402 may convert the transition signal into a bit stream to configure DCO 404 to activate and deactivate the first and second frequencies.
  • the duration of the pulse widths may correspond to time intervals which activate/deactivate the first and second frequencies.
  • Control signal generator 403 receives the modulated signal from modulator 402 and provides control signals to configure DCO 404 to transition from one frequency to another frequency. Control signal generator 403 may provide a first control word to configure DCO 404 to a first frequency and a second control word to configure DCO 404 to a second frequency. The modulated transition signal may be used to select between the first control word and the second control word during a transition period. The modulated transition signal may provide a smooth transition between the first frequency and the second frequency.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates an example electronic circuit 500 for generating an oscillating signal.
  • Circuit 500 includes transition signal generator 501 , modulator 502 , and multiplexer 503 .
  • Transition signal generator 501 produces 16 bit words to modulator 502 .
  • Modulator 502 is a sigma delta converter in this embodiment and produces a bit stream from accumulator 502 that successively switches between a first control word Xn and a second control word Xn+1.
  • Transition signal generator 501 provides a digital signal. The duration of the transition period may be programmed such that the rate of the transition may be controlled. Modulator 502 modulates the digital signal from transition signal generator 501 . Modulator 501 may be a first or higher order sigma delta converter. A summation node 504 receives the 16 bit transition signal, subtracts the 16 bit output of quantizer 506 , and adds the result of accumulator 505 . This produces a 32 bit error signal for the input of the accumulator 505 . Accumulator 505 functions as a digital integrator to a 32 bit error signal from summation node 504 . Accumulator 505 provides an integration of the error signal to quantizer 506 . The accumulator 505 provides a sign bit output to multiplexer 503 .
  • Modulator 502 converts the transition signal from transition signal generator 501 into a bit stream.
  • the sign bit of accumulator 505 is a sigma-delta modulated bit stream of the transition signal.
  • Multiplexer 503 may use this bit stream to select between control words associated with the change of frequency.
  • Control word Xn may correspond to a signal from DCO having a frequency fn and control word Xn+1 may correspond to a signal from DCO having frequency fn+1.
  • the modulated signal from modulator 502 provides a pulse width modulated signal corresponding to a smooth transition between frequency fn and frequency fn+1.
  • FIG. 6 illustrates an example electronic circuit 600 for generating an oscillating signal.
  • Circuit 600 includes control circuit 601 , transition signal generator 602 , digital word generator 603 , multiplexer 604 , and DCO 605 .
  • Multiplexer 604 may be similar to multiplexer 503 of FIG. 5 .
  • Multiplexer 604 receives digital words from digital word generator 603 . These words may be n bit, which corresponds to the output of multiplexer 604 and the DCO 605 circuitry used.
  • DCO 605 may have “n” switches which are used to configure the desired DCO frequency setting.
  • transition signal generator 602 generates a bit stream based on transition data 606 .
  • the transition data 606 may be predetermined to provide pulse width modulated data corresponding to a minimum frequency change.
  • the transition data may include pulse width modulated data corresponding to an increasing (e.g., A to B) transitional waveform and a pulse width modulated data corresponding to a decreasing (B to A) transitional waveform (as described above).
  • the bit stream is stored in memory and provided to the multiplexer 604 when needed for a transition.
  • Control circuit 601 may determine the succession of digital words provided by digital word generator 603 .
  • digital word generator 603 may also be a memory for storing digital words to be coupled to DCO 605 through multiplexer 604 as described above to transition between frequencies.
  • Control circuit 601 may also determine the transition data 606 which may be used to transition between the digital word provided at input A of multiplexer 604 and the digital word provided at input B of multiplexer 604 .
  • the transition signal generator 602 uses transition data 606 to provide a bit stream to multiplexer 604 .
  • Multiplexer 604 switches between digital words A and B to provide successive digital words to DCO 605 based on the bit stream provided by transition signal generator 602 .
  • a selection between digital word Xn corresponding to frequency fn and digital word Xn+1 corresponding to the next successive frequency fn+1 may be responsive to the bit stream.
  • Configuring DCO 605 to transition may include transition signal generator 602 generating the bit stream to provide the time intervals corresponding to the activation/deactivation of frequencies fn+1 and fn (as discussed above in regard to FIG. 3B ).

Abstract

In one embodiment the present invention includes a method of generating an oscillating signal at different frequencies. The method comprises configuring a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO). The DCO is configured to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency, and the DCO is configured to generate the oscillating signal at a second frequency. Additionally, the DCO is configured to transition from the first frequency to the second frequency during a transition time period. During the transition time period, the DCO activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals. The time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from the beginning of the transition time period to the end of the transition time period.

Description

RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 12/487,425 filed Jun. 18, 2009, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/076,461 filed Jun. 27, 2008, of which the disclosures are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
BACKGROUND
The present invention relates to digital circuits, and in particular, to a circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator.
FIG. 1 illustrates a communication system 100 that uses digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) 101 to provide a carrier signal for a receiver mixer 103 and a transmitter mixer 104. An input radio frequency (RF) signal RFin is amplified by amplifier 105, demodulated by receiver mixer 103, and processed by inter-frequency (IF)/baseband processor 102. IF/baseband processor 102 also provides a signal that transmitter mixer 104 modulates, and amplifier 106 amplifies to produce RF signal RFout.
DCO 101 receives a control signal of N-bits and may provide a carrier signal having a frequency f1 to receiver mixer 103 and to transmitter mixer 104. DCO 101 uses the digital control signal (N-bits) to adjust the frequency f1.
When the frequency f1 drifts or may otherwise require adjustment, the DCO 101 may be adjusted to provide a carrier signal having a new frequency and/or frequency adjustment. DCO control bits adjust the frequency of the DCO 101 in discrete steps and a minimum step of frequency may represent the smallest change of frequency f1.
The minimum step may be limited by the minimum capacitor values which may be switched internal to DCO 101. The minimum step may cause a disruption, such as glitches, in the processing of the signal within IF/baseband processor 102 or in a subsequent stage. For example, in FM (frequency modulation) demodulation of an audio signal, these glitches may cause clicking sounds from a speaker.
FIG. 2 illustrates the effect of a frequency change 202 on an audio signal 204. FM demodulator 201 receives a FM signal which includes a frequency change 202 over a step 203. This frequency step 203 may create an audio DC step after demodulation, which causes a glitch 205 in the audio signal 204. Glitch 205 may cause audible clicks to the user. If the frequency is recalibrated periodically, it may create undesirable audible tones.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Embodiments of the present invention improve digital frequency adjustment. In one embodiment, the present invention includes a method of generating an oscillating signal at different frequencies, the method comprising configuring a digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency, and configuring the digitally controlled oscillator to transition from the first frequency to a second frequency during a transition time period, the second frequency being different than the first frequency. During the transition time period, the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals. The time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
In one embodiment, the time intervals are increased based on a linear ramp.
In one embodiment, the time intervals are generated in response to a pulse width modulated signal.
In one embodiment, the method further comprises generating a transition signal and converting the transition signal into a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to activate and deactivate the first frequency and the second frequency.
In one embodiment, the transition signal is a digital signal that successively increases from a first value to a second value.
In one embodiment, converting the transition signal into a bit stream comprises processing the digital signal in a sigma-delta modulator.
In one embodiment, configuring the digitally controlled oscillator to transition includes generating a bit stream, wherein the bit stream comprises pulse width modulated data corresponding to a transition signal, and wherein a selection between a first code corresponding to the first frequency and a second code corresponding to the second frequency is responsive to the bit stream.
In one embodiment, the present invention includes an electronic circuit comprising a digital controlled oscillator for generating an oscillating signal and a transition controller coupled to the digitally controlled oscillator. The transition controller configures the digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency and transitions the oscillating signal from the first frequency to a second frequency during a transition time period, where the second frequency is different than the first frequency. During the transition time period, the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals, where the time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
In one embodiment, the transition controller includes a digital signal generator to provide a linear ramp to increase the time intervals.
In one embodiment, the transition controller includes a modulator to provide a pulse width modulated signal, where the time intervals are generated in response to the pulse width modulated signal.
In one embodiment, the transition controller comprises a digital signal generator to provide a transition signal and a converter to convert the transition signal into a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to activate and deactivate the first frequency and the second frequency.
In one embodiment, the converter is a sigma delta modulator to convert the transition signal into a bit stream.
In one embodiment, the transition signal is a digital signal that successively increases from a first value to a second value.
In one embodiment, the transition controller generates a bit stream to configure the digitally controlled oscillator to transition, where the bit stream comprises pulse width modulated data corresponding to a transition signal, and a selection between a first code corresponding to the first frequency and a second code corresponding to the second frequency is responsive to the bit stream.
In one embodiment, the present invention includes a communication system comprising an amplifier to amplify a radio frequency signal, a mixer to demodulate the radio frequency signal, a digital controlled oscillator to provide an oscillating signal to the mixer, and a transition controller coupled to the digitally controlled oscillator. The transition controller configures the digitally controlled oscillator to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency and transitions the oscillating signal from the first frequency to the second frequency during a transition time period, the second frequency being different than the first frequency, wherein during the transition time period, the digitally controlled oscillator activates the second frequency and deactivates the first frequency during a plurality of time intervals, and wherein the time intervals for activating the second frequency and deactivating the first frequency successively increase from a beginning of the transition time period to an end of the transition time period.
The following detailed description and accompanying drawings provide a detailed description of the present invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
FIG. 1 illustrates a conventional communication system that uses a digitally controlled oscillator to provide a carrier signal for a receiver mixer and a transmitter mixer.
FIG. 2 illustrates the effect of a frequency change on an audio signal.
FIG. 3A illustrates a RF communication system.
FIG. 3B illustrates a timing diagram 310 associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A.
FIG. 3C illustrates a transition signal waveform and a corresponding audio signal waveform associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A.
FIG. 4 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
FIG. 5 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
FIG. 6 illustrates an electronic circuit for generating an oscillating signal.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Described herein are techniques for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous examples and specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be evident, however, to one skilled in the art that the present invention as defined by the claims may include some or all of the features in these examples alone or in combination with other features described below, and may further include modifications and equivalents of the features and concepts described herein.
FIG. 3A illustrates a RF communication system 300. RF communication system 300 includes amplifier 305, mixer 303, IF/baseband processor 304, digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) 301, and transition controller 302. Amplifier 305 receives and amplifies signal RFin (e.g., from an antenna). Mixer 303 demodulates RFin by using an oscillating signal from digitally controlled oscillator 301. The demodulated signal from mixer 303 is received and processed by IF/baseband processor 304. Transition controller 302 generates a digital signal to configure digitally controlled oscillator 301. The digitally controlled oscillator 301 may be configured to generate signals at different frequencies and may be configured to transition from a signal having one frequency to a signal having another frequency.
FIG. 3B illustrates an example timing diagram 310 associated with the communication system 300 of FIG. 3A. Timing diagram 300 includes waveform f1 showing the activation/deactivation of a first frequency, and waveform f2 showing the activation/deactivation of a second frequency. Before transition period 311, DCO 301 of FIG. 3A may be configured to generate the oscillating signal at a first frequency. After transition period 311, DCO 301 may be configured to generate the oscillating signal at a second frequency.
As shown in the timing diagram 310, the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated for time intervals t1, t2, t3, . . . , tN-2, tN-1, tN. The time intervals successively increase from the beginning of transition period 311 to the end of the transition period 311. For example, during time interval t1, the transition controller may deactivate the first frequency (i.e., the frequency of the signal before the transition) and activate the second frequency (i.e., the frequency of the signal after the transition). Initially, the time interval when the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated is small. Accordingly, the average frequency is approximately the first frequency. However, as the transition period 311 progresses, the time intervals increase. Accordingly, toward the end of the transition period 311, the time interval when the first frequency is deactivated and the second frequency is activated is large. Accordingly, the average frequency is approximately the second frequency. Features and advantages of the present invention include transitioning from one frequency to another by successively increasing the time intervals as described above, thereby resulting in a smoother frequency transition than would be obtained with a step increase between the two frequencies. The intervals may increase according to a variety of techniques. In one embodiment, the intervals may be increased based on a transition signal such as a linear ramp, for example. As described below, different transition signals may be used. In one embodiment, the time period from the beginning one time interval to the beginning of the next time interval may be constant across the entire transition period, as in some pulse code modulated systems (e.g., tint1 may be the same as time period tint(N−1)). Therefore, the time intervals (e.g. t1, t2, etc. . . . ) may correspond to transition signal which has been pulse width modulated as described in more detail below.
FIG. 3C illustrates an example transition signal waveform 320 and a corresponding audio signal waveform 330 associated with the communication system of FIG. 3A. In the example of FIG. 3C, transition signal waveform 320 is a linear ramp. Level 321 may correspond to a first frequency and level 323 may correspond to a second frequency. During transition period 322, transition signal waveform 320 increases from level 321 to level 323. Audio signal waveform 330 indicates the effect of a change in frequency on an audio signal envelope 333 after FM demodulation. The deviation of the signal illustrated by 332 is significantly reduced by using the frequency transition techniques described herein as compared with a step frequency change. In comparison with prior art techniques illustrated at 204 and 205 in FIG. 2, the audio signal change is smoother and not as abrupt, which reduces audible noise resulting from the transition. While the above transition signal illustrates an increasing transitional waveform, it is to be understood that other embodiments of the present invention may use a transition scheme using successively decreasing time intervals and decreasing transition signals. The examples provided in this specification for increasing time intervals and increasing transitions signals are, therefore, only exemplary.
Portion 331 indicates approximately where audio signal waveform 330 is perturbed by the transition signal waveform 320, and audio signal waveform 330 moves an additional amount 332. The amount of perturbation of the audio signal waveform 330 may be further reduced by altering the transition signal waveform 320 as indicated by alternative transition signal waveform 324 (shown by dashed line). Alternative transition signal waveform 324 may be associated with a higher order equation such as arctangent, for example. The time intervals of FIG. 3B may be increased successively based on the linear ramp, arctangent, or other monotonically increasing signal used for the transition signal waveform 320.
FIG. 4 illustrates an example electronic circuit 400 for generating an oscillating signal. Electronic circuit 400 includes transition signal generator 401, modulator 402, control signal generator 403, and DCO 404. Control signal generator 403 may generate control signals, such as digital control signals, to configure DCO 404 to generate an oscillating signal at a first frequency. Also, control signal generator 403 may generate control signals to configure DCO 404 to generate an oscillating signal at a second frequency. The control signal generator 403 may receive inputs from the transition signal generator 401 and modulator 402 to configure DCO 404 to transition from the first frequency to the second frequency.
Transition signal generator 401 generates transition signals. For example, the transition signal may be a linear ramp, an arctangent, or a combination of mathematical equations that produce a smooth transition from a first level to a second level. The transition signal generator 401 may generate a digital signal corresponding to a continuous transitional waveform. The transition signal may be a digital signal that successively increases from a first initial value to a second final value with a plurality of intermediate values. In this case, the first value may correspond to a first frequency and the second value may correspond to a second frequency. In one embodiment, the transition signal generator 401 is a counter, for example.
Modulator 402 modulates the transition signal provided by transition signal generator 401. Modulator 402 may be a pulse width modulator (PWM) such as a sigma delta converter, for example. Modulator 402 may convert the transition signal into a bit stream to configure DCO 404 to activate and deactivate the first and second frequencies. The duration of the pulse widths may correspond to time intervals which activate/deactivate the first and second frequencies.
Control signal generator 403 receives the modulated signal from modulator 402 and provides control signals to configure DCO 404 to transition from one frequency to another frequency. Control signal generator 403 may provide a first control word to configure DCO 404 to a first frequency and a second control word to configure DCO 404 to a second frequency. The modulated transition signal may be used to select between the first control word and the second control word during a transition period. The modulated transition signal may provide a smooth transition between the first frequency and the second frequency.
FIG. 5 illustrates an example electronic circuit 500 for generating an oscillating signal. Circuit 500 includes transition signal generator 501, modulator 502, and multiplexer 503. Transition signal generator 501 produces 16 bit words to modulator 502. Modulator 502 is a sigma delta converter in this embodiment and produces a bit stream from accumulator 502 that successively switches between a first control word Xn and a second control word Xn+1.
Transition signal generator 501 provides a digital signal. The duration of the transition period may be programmed such that the rate of the transition may be controlled. Modulator 502 modulates the digital signal from transition signal generator 501. Modulator 501 may be a first or higher order sigma delta converter. A summation node 504 receives the 16 bit transition signal, subtracts the 16 bit output of quantizer 506, and adds the result of accumulator 505. This produces a 32 bit error signal for the input of the accumulator 505. Accumulator 505 functions as a digital integrator to a 32 bit error signal from summation node 504. Accumulator 505 provides an integration of the error signal to quantizer 506. The accumulator 505 provides a sign bit output to multiplexer 503.
Modulator 502 converts the transition signal from transition signal generator 501 into a bit stream. The sign bit of accumulator 505 is a sigma-delta modulated bit stream of the transition signal. Multiplexer 503 may use this bit stream to select between control words associated with the change of frequency.
Multiplexer 503 selects between two control words at input A and input B. Control word Xn may correspond to a signal from DCO having a frequency fn and control word Xn+1 may correspond to a signal from DCO having frequency fn+1. The modulated signal from modulator 502 provides a pulse width modulated signal corresponding to a smooth transition between frequency fn and frequency fn+1.
FIG. 6 illustrates an example electronic circuit 600 for generating an oscillating signal. Circuit 600 includes control circuit 601, transition signal generator 602, digital word generator 603, multiplexer 604, and DCO 605. Multiplexer 604 may be similar to multiplexer 503 of FIG. 5. Multiplexer 604 receives digital words from digital word generator 603. These words may be n bit, which corresponds to the output of multiplexer 604 and the DCO 605 circuitry used. For example, DCO 605 may have “n” switches which are used to configure the desired DCO frequency setting.
In one implementation, transition signal generator 602 generates a bit stream based on transition data 606. The transition data 606 may be predetermined to provide pulse width modulated data corresponding to a minimum frequency change. The transition data may include pulse width modulated data corresponding to an increasing (e.g., A to B) transitional waveform and a pulse width modulated data corresponding to a decreasing (B to A) transitional waveform (as described above). In one implementation, rather than generating the modulated data from a transition signal, the bit stream is stored in memory and provided to the multiplexer 604 when needed for a transition.
Control circuit 601 may determine the succession of digital words provided by digital word generator 603. For example, digital word generator 603 may also be a memory for storing digital words to be coupled to DCO 605 through multiplexer 604 as described above to transition between frequencies. Control circuit 601 may also determine the transition data 606 which may be used to transition between the digital word provided at input A of multiplexer 604 and the digital word provided at input B of multiplexer 604. The transition signal generator 602 uses transition data 606 to provide a bit stream to multiplexer 604.
Multiplexer 604 switches between digital words A and B to provide successive digital words to DCO 605 based on the bit stream provided by transition signal generator 602. A selection between digital word Xn corresponding to frequency fn and digital word Xn+1 corresponding to the next successive frequency fn+1 may be responsive to the bit stream. Configuring DCO 605 to transition may include transition signal generator 602 generating the bit stream to provide the time intervals corresponding to the activation/deactivation of frequencies fn+1 and fn (as discussed above in regard to FIG. 3B).
The above description illustrates various embodiments of the present invention along with examples of how aspects of the present invention may be implemented. The above examples and embodiments should not be deemed to be the only embodiments, and are presented to illustrate the flexibility and advantages of the present invention as defined by the following claims. For example, one or more steps of methods or processes discussed above may be performed in a different order (or concurrently) and still achieve desirable results. Based on the above disclosure and the following claims, other arrangements, embodiments, implementations and equivalents may be employed without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the claims.

Claims (20)

The invention claimed is:
1. A method of comprising:
deactivating, via a transition controller and during each sub-interval of a transition time, a first frequency of a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) generating an oscillating signal at the first frequency, the first frequency being a discrete frequency adjustment step of the DCO, the transition controller implemented at least partially in hardware; and
activating, via the transition controller and during each sub-interval of the transition time, a second frequency of the DCO to transition the oscillating signal generated by the DCO from the first frequency to the second frequency over the transition time, the second frequency being another discrete frequency step of the DCO, a first amount of time the first frequency is deactivated and a second amount of time the second frequency is activated progressively increasing during each successive sub-interval of the transition time.
2. The method as recited by claim 1, wherein the first amount of time the first frequency is deactivated during each sub-interval of the transition time is approximately equal to the second amount of time the second frequency is activated during each sub-interval of the transition time.
3. The method as recited by claim 1, wherein the first amount of time the first frequency is deactivated or the second amount of time the second frequency is activated during each successive sub-interval of the transition time progressively increases based on a linear ramp.
4. The method as recited by claim 1, wherein the first frequency is deactivated for the first amount of time or the second frequency is activated for the second amount of time during each sub-interval in response to a pulse-width modulated signal.
5. The method as recited by claim 1, further comprising:
generating a transition signal for transitioning the oscillating signal from the first frequency to the second frequency;
converting the transition signal into a bit stream for configuring the DCO; and
applying, during the transition time, the bit stream to the DCO to deactivate the first frequency and activate the second frequency.
6. The method as recited by claim 1, wherein transitioning the oscillating signal provided by the DCO from the first frequency to the second frequency over the transition time is effective to reduce distortion of a signal that is modulated or demodulated using the oscillating signal.
7. A circuit comprising:
a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) having multiple frequency steps and configured to generate an oscillating signal based on at least a first frequency or a second frequency of the multiple frequency steps;
a transition controller operably coupled with the DCO, the transition controller configured to transition the oscillating signal generated by the DCO from the first frequency to the second frequency by:
deactivating, during each successive sub-interval of a transition time, the first frequency of the DCO for a progressively increasing amount of time; and
activating, during each successive sub-interval of the transition time, the second frequency of the DCO for another progressively increasing amount of time.
8. The circuit as recited by claim 7, wherein the transition controller is configured to activate the second frequency of the DCO for the other progressively increasing amounts of time until the oscillating signal generated by the DCO is approximately the second frequency.
9. The circuit as recited by claim 7, wherein the progressively increasing amount of time and the other progressively increasing amount of time are approximately equal for a same sub-interval of transition time.
10. The circuit as recited by claim 7, further comprising a pulse-width-modulator to provide a pulse-width-modulated signal and wherein the transition controller is further configured to increase, based on the pulse-width-modulated signal, the progressively increasing amount of time or the other progressively increasing amount of time at each successive sub-interval of transition time.
11. The circuit as recited by claim 7, further comprising a digital-signal generator to provide a transition signal, a converter to convert the transition signal into a bit stream for configuring the DCO, and wherein the transition controller is further configured to use the bit stream to deactivate the first frequency and activate the second frequency of the DCO.
12. The circuit as recited by claim 11, wherein the converter is a sigma delta modulator configured to convert the transition signal into the bit stream for configuring the DCO.
13. The circuit as recited by claim 11, wherein the transition signal provided by the digital-signal generator is a digital signal that successively increases from a first value to a second value.
14. The circuit as recited by claim 13, wherein the digital signal successively increases from the first value to the second value during the transition time.
15. A communication system comprising:
a mixer to modulate a signal or demodulate a modulated signal based on an oscillating signal;
a digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) configured to provide the oscillating signal to the mixer, the DCO having multiple frequency steps that include a first frequency and a second frequency;
a transition controller operably coupled with the DCO, the transition controller configured to:
deactivate, during successive sub-intervals of a transition time, the first frequency of the DCO for increasing amounts of time to transition the oscillating signal from the first frequency; and
activating, during successive sub-intervals of the transition time, the second frequency of the DCO when the first frequency is deactivated to transition the oscillating signal to the second frequency.
16. The communication system as recited by claim 15, further comprising a digital signal generator to provide a linear ramp and wherein the transition controller is configured to determine the increasing amounts of time for each successive sub-interval using the linear ramp.
17. The communication system as recited by claim 15, further comprising a modulator to provide a pulse-width-modulated signal and wherein the transition controller is configured to determine the increasing amounts of time for each successive sub-interval using the pulse-width-modulated signal.
18. The communication system as recited by claim 15, further comprising a digital signal generator to provide a transition signal, a converter to convert the transition signal into a bit stream for configuring the DCO, and wherein the transition controller is configured to use the bit stream to deactivate the first frequency and activate second frequency.
19. The communication system as recited by claim 15, wherein the signal is a radio frequency signal, baseband signal, or audio signal.
20. The communication system as recited by claim 15, further comprising an amplifier to amplify the signal or the modulated signal.
US14/089,515 2008-06-27 2013-11-25 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator Active US8923788B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US14/089,515 US8923788B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-11-25 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US7646108P 2008-06-27 2008-06-27
US12/487,425 US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2009-06-18 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US14/089,515 US8923788B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-11-25 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/487,425 Continuation US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2009-06-18 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US8923788B1 true US8923788B1 (en) 2014-12-30

Family

ID=49640818

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/487,425 Active 2031-07-20 US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2009-06-18 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US14/089,515 Active US8923788B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-11-25 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/487,425 Active 2031-07-20 US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2009-06-18 Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (2) US8600324B1 (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8983557B1 (en) 2011-06-30 2015-03-17 Marvell International Ltd. Reducing power consumption of a multi-antenna transceiver
US8989669B2 (en) 2008-06-16 2015-03-24 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-range wireless communication
US9055460B1 (en) 2008-08-11 2015-06-09 Marvell International Ltd. Location-based detection of interference in cellular communications systems
US9066369B1 (en) 2009-09-16 2015-06-23 Marvell International Ltd. Coexisting radio communication
US9125216B1 (en) 2011-09-28 2015-09-01 Marvell International Ltd. Method and apparatus for avoiding interference among multiple radios
US9148200B1 (en) 2007-12-11 2015-09-29 Marvell International Ltd. Determining power over ethernet impairment
US9215708B2 (en) 2012-02-07 2015-12-15 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-network communication
US9401737B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2016-07-26 Marvell International Ltd. Circuits and methods for generating oscillating signals
US9450649B2 (en) 2012-07-02 2016-09-20 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Shaping near-field transmission signals

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8275314B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2012-09-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth scan modes
US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-12-03 Marvell International Ltd Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US9288764B1 (en) 2008-12-31 2016-03-15 Marvell International Ltd. Discovery-phase power conservation
US8472427B1 (en) 2009-04-06 2013-06-25 Marvell International Ltd. Packet exchange arbitration for coexisting radios
US8767771B1 (en) 2010-05-11 2014-07-01 Marvell International Ltd. Wakeup beacons for mesh networks
JP5776128B2 (en) 2010-10-20 2015-09-09 マーベル ワールド トレード リミテッド Discovery before association
US8750278B1 (en) 2011-05-26 2014-06-10 Marvell International Ltd. Method and apparatus for off-channel device invitation

Citations (297)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4337463A (en) 1980-08-22 1982-06-29 Control Data Corporation Time synchronization master station and remote station system
US4805215A (en) 1986-10-01 1989-02-14 Racal Data Communications Inc. Adaptive echo canceller with sparse dynamically positioned taps
US5347234A (en) 1993-03-26 1994-09-13 International Business Machines Corp. Digital voltage controlled oscillator
US5634207A (en) 1995-02-13 1997-05-27 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency converter capable of reducing noise components in local oscillation signals
US5673291A (en) 1994-09-14 1997-09-30 Ericsson Inc. Simultaneous demodulation and decoding of a digitally modulated radio signal using known symbols
US5708656A (en) 1996-09-11 1998-01-13 Nokia Mobile Phones Limited Method and apparatus for packet data transmission
US5847616A (en) 1996-12-12 1998-12-08 Tritech Microelectronics International, Ltd. Embedded voltage controlled oscillator with minimum sensitivity to process and supply
US5995819A (en) 1995-11-22 1999-11-30 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency converter and radio receiver using same
US6167245A (en) 1998-05-29 2000-12-26 Silicon Laboratories, Inc. Method and apparatus for operating a PLL with a phase detector/sample hold circuit for synthesizing high-frequency signals for wireless communications
US6285262B1 (en) 1998-06-30 2001-09-04 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency divider, a phase lock oscillator and a flip-flop circuit using the frequency divider
WO2001078252A1 (en) 2000-04-07 2001-10-18 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Radio communication system and method of controlling downlink transmission power or bit rate
US6320919B1 (en) 1998-11-30 2001-11-20 Ericsson Inc. Adaptive channel characterization using decoded symbols
US6347091B1 (en) 1998-06-19 2002-02-12 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Method and apparatus for dynamically adapting a connection state in a mobile communications system
US20020025810A1 (en) 2000-07-11 2002-02-28 Takashi Takayama High-speed roaming method of wireless LAN
US6366622B1 (en) 1998-12-18 2002-04-02 Silicon Wave, Inc. Apparatus and method for wireless communications
US6374117B1 (en) 1999-12-22 2002-04-16 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Queue based power control scheduling
US20020049854A1 (en) 2000-03-10 2002-04-25 Cox Michael Stefan IP/data traffic allocating method to maintain QoS
US20020102941A1 (en) 2001-01-31 2002-08-01 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Measurement method and device for activating interfrequency handover in a wireless telecommunication network
US6438364B1 (en) 2000-06-06 2002-08-20 Philips Electronics North America Corporation Radio frequency device with fast charging of an input capacitance
US6452458B1 (en) 1999-04-30 2002-09-17 Nec Corporation Voltage-controlled oscillator
WO2002082751A2 (en) 2001-04-09 2002-10-17 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Instantaneous joint transmit power control and link adaptation for rts/cts based channel access
WO2002091623A1 (en) 2001-05-10 2002-11-14 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Updating path loss estimation for power control and link adaption in ieee 802.11h wlan
US6509777B2 (en) 2001-01-23 2003-01-21 Resonext Communications, Inc. Method and apparatus for reducing DC offset
US6519461B1 (en) 1999-10-29 2003-02-11 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Channel-type switching from a common channel to a dedicated channel based on common channel load
US20030040316A1 (en) 2001-03-22 2003-02-27 Peter Stanforth Prioritized-routing for an ad-hoc, peer-to-peer, mobile radio access system based on battery-power levels and type of service
US6535037B2 (en) 2000-02-04 2003-03-18 James Maligeorgos Injection locked frequency multiplier
US6553229B1 (en) 1998-11-24 2003-04-22 Ericsson Inc. Signal scanning systems and methods for multiple-mode cellular radiotelephones
US20030148750A1 (en) 2002-02-07 2003-08-07 Yan Kelvin Kai Tuan DC offset correction using dummy amplifier
US20030198200A1 (en) 2002-04-22 2003-10-23 Cognio, Inc. System and Method for Spectrum Management of a Shared Frequency Band
US6640308B1 (en) 1999-04-16 2003-10-28 Invensys Systems, Inc. System and method of powering and communicating field ethernet device for an instrumentation and control using a single pair of powered ethernet wire
US6650195B1 (en) 2001-07-30 2003-11-18 Xilinx, Inc. Oscillator with differential tunable tank circuit
US6675328B1 (en) 1999-10-08 2004-01-06 Vigilant Networks, Llc System and method to determine data throughput in a communication network
US20040044489A1 (en) 2001-03-16 2004-03-04 Jones Keith R. Optical sequence time domain reflectometry during data transmission
US20040063403A1 (en) 2002-09-30 2004-04-01 Durrant Randolph L. Methods for identification of IEEE 802.11b radio signals
US6738358B2 (en) 2000-09-09 2004-05-18 Intel Corporation Network echo canceller for integrated telecommunications processing
US6741862B2 (en) 2001-02-07 2004-05-25 Airvana, Inc. Enhanced reverse-link rate control in wireless communication
US20040105401A1 (en) 2002-12-02 2004-06-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for reducing power consumption in ad-hoc network
US20040110470A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2004-06-10 Tsien Chih C. Method and apparatus to control transmitter
US6754189B1 (en) 1999-04-08 2004-06-22 Lucent Technologies Inc. Method of queue length based burst management in wireless communication systems
US20040162106A1 (en) 2002-08-14 2004-08-19 Monroe Robert L. Method and apparatus for mitigating radio frequency interference between transceiver systems
US20040192222A1 (en) 2003-03-26 2004-09-30 Nokia Corporation System and method for semi-simultaneously coupling an antenna to transceivers
US20040198297A1 (en) 2003-04-01 2004-10-07 Oh Seung Min Quadrature signal generator with feedback type frequency doubler
US20040214575A1 (en) 2003-04-22 2004-10-28 Vladan Jovanovic Method of handoff at the border between CDMA underlay and overlay systems
US6816452B1 (en) 1999-07-14 2004-11-09 Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. Vehicle-to-roadside communication system, roadside communication station, and on-board mobile station
US20040233881A1 (en) 2003-05-06 2004-11-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Route discovery device and method in a mobile ad-hoc network
US20050018641A1 (en) 2001-09-03 2005-01-27 Chunming Zhao Method and equipment for regulating dynamically an average area of a channel estimation
US20050025104A1 (en) 2003-07-30 2005-02-03 Fischer Michael Andrew Managing coexistence of separate protocols sharing the same communications channel
US20050025174A1 (en) 2003-07-30 2005-02-03 Fischer Michael Andrew Managing an access point in the presence of separate protocols that share the same communications channel
US20050038876A1 (en) 2003-08-15 2005-02-17 Aloke Chaudhuri System and method for instant match based on location, presence, personalization and communication
US20050058151A1 (en) 2003-06-30 2005-03-17 Chihsiang Yeh Method of interference management for interference/collision avoidance and spatial reuse enhancement
US20050064840A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2005-03-24 The Regents Of The University Of California Wideband distributed mixers
US20050090218A1 (en) 2003-10-24 2005-04-28 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Oscillation device and mobile communication apparatus
US20050120119A1 (en) 2003-12-01 2005-06-02 Microsoft Corporation Smart scan for bluetooth pan devices
US20050135360A1 (en) 2003-12-19 2005-06-23 Changmin Shin Method of providing routing protocol in sensor network
US6922433B2 (en) 2000-03-29 2005-07-26 Nec Corporation CDMA demodulation circuit and CDMA demodulation method
US20050174962A1 (en) 2004-02-05 2005-08-11 David Gurevich Generic client for communication devices
US6934566B2 (en) 2000-12-21 2005-08-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Wireless communication device and controlling method thereof
US20050186962A1 (en) 1999-09-08 2005-08-25 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Mobile station and base station
US6946950B1 (en) 1999-07-12 2005-09-20 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Mobile body discrimination apparatus for rapidly acquiring respective data sets transmitted through modulation of reflected radio waves by transponders which are within a communication region of an interrogator apparatus
US20050206554A1 (en) 2004-02-09 2005-09-22 Sony Corporation Wireless communication system, wireless communication apparatus, wireless communication method, and computer program
US20050215197A1 (en) 2004-03-29 2005-09-29 Chen Camille C Apparatus and methods for coexistence of collocated wireless local area network and bluetooth based on dynamic fragmentation of WLAN packets
US6954708B2 (en) 1999-08-11 2005-10-11 Broadcom Corporation System and method for detecting a device requiring power
US20050250528A1 (en) 2004-04-16 2005-11-10 Hak-Hoon Song System of wireless local area network based on transmit power control and method for controlling transmit power
US20050254423A1 (en) 2004-05-12 2005-11-17 Nokia Corporation Rate shaper algorithm
US20050281278A1 (en) 2004-05-05 2005-12-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for adaptive delay management
US20060007863A1 (en) 2002-09-05 2006-01-12 Siamak Naghian Signal propagation delay routing
US20060049880A1 (en) 2004-09-03 2006-03-09 Hans-Martin Rein Voltage controlled oscillator (vco) with output buffer
US20060063509A1 (en) 1999-01-12 2006-03-23 David Pincu System for providing power over Ethernet through a patch panel
US20060079232A1 (en) 2004-09-22 2006-04-13 Nec Corporation Wireless LAN handover method, wireless terminal, program product for use in the wireless terminal, and wireless communications system
WO2006043956A1 (en) 2004-10-20 2006-04-27 Thomson Licensing Method for mobile terminal access to wireless lan based on access point services and service parameters
US20060114044A1 (en) 2004-11-30 2006-06-01 Svilen Mintchev Differential delay cell having controllable amplitude output
US20060120338A1 (en) 2004-12-08 2006-06-08 Bo-Seung Hwang System and method for controlling transmission power in wireless local area network
US20060128308A1 (en) 2004-12-10 2006-06-15 Texas Instruments Incorporated Low power bluetooth page and inquiry scan
US20060128347A1 (en) 2003-12-02 2006-06-15 Pramote Piriyapoksombut Radio integrated circuit with integrated power amplifier
JP2006174162A (en) 2004-12-16 2006-06-29 Canon Inc Wireless access point
US7079811B2 (en) 2001-08-15 2006-07-18 Qualcomm, Incorporated Dual mode bluetooth/wireless device with power conservation features
US20060189359A1 (en) 2000-09-28 2006-08-24 David Kammer Power-conserving intuitive device discovery technique in a Bluetooth environment
WO2006090254A1 (en) 2005-02-25 2006-08-31 Nokia Corporation Method and system for voip over wlan to bluetooth headset using advanced esco scheduling
US20060200862A1 (en) 2005-03-03 2006-09-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for locating rogue access point switch ports in a wireless network related patent applications
US20060199565A1 (en) 2005-03-07 2006-09-07 Wialan Technology A Florida Corporation Enhancement to the IEEE 802.11 protocol handshake
US20060215601A1 (en) 2005-03-14 2006-09-28 H-Stream Wireless, Inc. Method and apparatus for coordinating a wireless PAN network and a wireless LAN network
US20060223474A1 (en) 2005-03-29 2006-10-05 Yasunobu Yoshizaki Semiconductor integrated circuit
US20060239443A1 (en) 2004-10-15 2006-10-26 Oxford William V Videoconferencing echo cancellers
US20060252418A1 (en) 2005-05-06 2006-11-09 Quinn Liam B Systems and methods for RF spectrum management
US20060251198A1 (en) 2005-05-09 2006-11-09 Xiaoqiang Ma Systems, methods, and apparatus for phase noise mitigation
US7139540B2 (en) 1999-10-21 2006-11-21 Broadcom Corporation Adaptive radio transceiver with calibration
US20060264179A1 (en) 2005-05-02 2006-11-23 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Method and device for managing signal measurements in a wireless network
US20060268804A1 (en) 2005-05-12 2006-11-30 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for scheduling in WLAN mesh communication system
US20060268756A1 (en) 2005-05-03 2006-11-30 Hong Kong Applied Science And Technology Research Institute Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for efficient hand-off in wireless networks
US20060282541A1 (en) 2005-06-13 2006-12-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for setting communication parameters and communication device
US20060282667A1 (en) 2005-05-12 2006-12-14 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for performing re-association due to handover in a WLAN mesh network
US20060281404A1 (en) 2005-06-13 2006-12-14 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Relay system and method for cellular communication
US20060286935A1 (en) 2005-06-21 2006-12-21 Yoriko Utsunomiya Apparatus and method for wireless communication
US20070010237A1 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-01-11 Airgo Networks, Inc. Mac-level protection for networking extended-range and legacy devices in a wireless network
US20070010247A1 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-01-11 Mouna-Kingue Michel S Detection of invalid channel
WO2007008981A1 (en) 2005-07-11 2007-01-18 Qualcomm Incorporated Coordinating communication for multiple wireless communication protocols co-located in a single electronic device
US20070014314A1 (en) 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Bellsouth Intellectual Property Corporation Peer-to-peer synchronization of data between devices
JP2007028568A (en) 2005-06-14 2007-02-01 Ntt Docomo Inc Base station, mobile station, and power control method
US20070026810A1 (en) 2005-08-01 2007-02-01 Love Robert T Channel quality indicator for time, frequency and spatial channel in terrestrial radio access network
US7173431B1 (en) 2002-06-07 2007-02-06 Marvell International Ltd. Cable tester
US20070077908A1 (en) 1998-11-12 2007-04-05 Broadcom Corporation Fully integrated tuner architecture
US20070081553A1 (en) 2005-10-12 2007-04-12 Finisar Corporation Network tap device powered by power over ethernet
US7206840B2 (en) 2001-05-11 2007-04-17 Koninklike Philips Electronics N.V. Dynamic frequency selection scheme for IEEE 802.11 WLANs
US7212798B1 (en) 2003-07-17 2007-05-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Adaptive AGC in a wireless network receiver
US20070103829A1 (en) 2005-11-10 2007-05-10 Powerdsine, Ltd. Enhanced Classification for Power Over Ethernet
US20070109973A1 (en) 2005-03-09 2007-05-17 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Co-location interference avoidance in multiple protocol communication networks
US20070142080A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2007-06-21 Renesas Technology Corp Direct-conversion transmitter circuit and transceiver system
US7239882B1 (en) 2002-11-25 2007-07-03 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Method and system for brokering frequencies to facilitate peer-to-peer communication
US20070173286A1 (en) 2005-04-04 2007-07-26 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Distribution of shared local oscillation to multiple RF intefaces of a wireless device
US20070178888A1 (en) 2003-01-23 2007-08-02 Research In Motion Limited Methods and apparatus for re-establishing communication for a wireless communication device after a communication loss in a wireless communication network
US20070183443A1 (en) 2006-02-08 2007-08-09 Sang-Yeon Won Apparatus and method for transmitting data frame in WLAN terminal
US7257095B2 (en) 2003-07-30 2007-08-14 Texas Instruments Incorporated Power saving via physical layer address filtering in WLANs
US20070202814A1 (en) 2003-10-01 2007-08-30 Ikuya Ono Wireless communication semiconductor integrated circuit device and wireless communication system
US20070200622A1 (en) 2006-01-05 2007-08-30 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Modulator apparatus operating at low supply voltage, and corresponding method of modulation
US20070206519A1 (en) 2004-02-13 2007-09-06 Broadcom Cororation, A California Corporation RF transceiver configuring for a MIMO communication
US20070206762A1 (en) 2006-03-06 2007-09-06 Alcatel Multiple criteria based load balancing
US20070223430A1 (en) 2005-06-02 2007-09-27 Prasanna Desai Method and apparatus for enabling simultaneous VoWLAN and Bluetooth audio in small form factor handheld devices
US20070238482A1 (en) 2006-03-30 2007-10-11 Giora Rayzman Device, system and method of coordination among multiple transceivers
US20070242645A1 (en) 2006-04-18 2007-10-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Battery-efficient generic advertising service for wireless mobile devices
US7286009B2 (en) 2005-12-30 2007-10-23 D2Audio Corporation Digital PWM amplifier with simulation-based feedback
US20070264959A1 (en) 2006-05-11 2007-11-15 M/A-Com, Inc. Quadrature sub-harmonic frequency down-converter
US7298183B2 (en) 2005-06-01 2007-11-20 Wilinx Corp. High frequency divider circuits and methods
WO2007064822A3 (en) 2005-12-01 2007-11-22 Ruckus Wireless Inc On-demand services by wireless base station virtualization
US20070268862A1 (en) 2006-05-18 2007-11-22 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for establishing a connection on a secondary frequency channel for wireless communication
EP1860827A2 (en) 2006-05-24 2007-11-28 Broadcom Corporation Method and system for auto coexistence priority selection for a SCO link
US20070280471A1 (en) 2006-06-02 2007-12-06 Broadcom Corporation Minimizing saturation caused by power transfer in a communication system transformer
US20070286298A1 (en) 2006-06-09 2007-12-13 Choi Yang-Seok Doppler frequency determination for mobile wireless devices
US7310023B2 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-12-18 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Frequency synthesizer
US20070297388A1 (en) 2006-06-27 2007-12-27 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for routing data in networks
US7319849B2 (en) 2005-08-25 2008-01-15 Microtune (Texas), L.P. Radio-frequency tuner with differential converter
US20080027033A1 (en) 2003-11-19 2008-01-31 Acrux Dds Pty Ltd Method and Composition for Treatment of Cutaneous Lesions
US20080045162A1 (en) 1999-10-21 2008-02-21 Broadcom Corporation Adaptive radio transceiver
US20080056201A1 (en) 2006-03-22 2008-03-06 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Interference parameter reporting from client devices to access point for use in modifying wireless operations
US7342895B2 (en) 2004-01-30 2008-03-11 Mark Serpa Method and system for peer-to-peer wireless communication over unlicensed communication spectrum
US20080069034A1 (en) 2006-09-20 2008-03-20 Buddhikot Milind M Interference Aware Routing in Multi-Radio Wireless Mesh Networks
US20080080446A1 (en) 2006-09-28 2008-04-03 Mediatek Inc. Systems and methods for power management in a multiple input multiple output (mimo) wireless local area network (wlan)
US7355416B1 (en) 2007-01-07 2008-04-08 Microsemi Corp.- Analog Mixed Signal Group Ltd. Measurement of cable quality by power over ethernet
US20080095058A1 (en) 2004-07-09 2008-04-24 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. Data Transmission in a Communication Network
US20080095059A1 (en) 2006-10-20 2008-04-24 Stmicroelectronics, Inc. System and method for providing an adaptive value of TTL (Time to Live) for broadcast/multicast messages in a mesh network using a hybrid wireless mesh protocol
US20080111639A1 (en) 2006-10-27 2008-05-15 Interuniversitair Microelektronica Centrum (Imec) Device and method for generating a signal with predefined transcient at start-up
US7377441B2 (en) 2004-03-05 2008-05-27 Microvision, Inc. Electronic device with auxiliary interfaces
US20080130595A1 (en) 2006-11-30 2008-06-05 Sherif Aly Abdel-Kader Determining identifiers for wireless networks
US20080129118A1 (en) 2006-11-30 2008-06-05 Broadcom Corporation System and method for controlling power delivered to a powered device based on channel impediments
US20080139212A1 (en) 2006-12-07 2008-06-12 Motorola, Inc. Apparatus and method for interoperation of various radio links with a piconet link in a wireless device
US20080137580A1 (en) 2004-04-05 2008-06-12 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Method, Communication Device and System For Address Resolution Mapping In a Wireless Multihop Ad Hoc Network
US7395040B2 (en) 2005-03-29 2008-07-01 Broadcom Corporation Multiple band multiple input multiple output transceiver integrated circuit
US20080161031A1 (en) 2006-12-28 2008-07-03 Palm, Inc. Coordination of transmissions in wireless communications devices
US20080170550A1 (en) 2005-03-10 2008-07-17 Hang Liu Hybrid Mesh Routing Protocol
US7403018B1 (en) 2002-06-07 2008-07-22 Marvell International Ltd. Cable tester
US20080181154A1 (en) 2007-01-31 2008-07-31 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of low power wireless local area network independent basic service set mode operation
US20080187003A1 (en) 2007-02-06 2008-08-07 Viasat, Inc. Piggyback requests in scheduled transmission
US20080232287A1 (en) 2007-03-21 2008-09-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for power saving scheduling in wireless local area networks
US20080238679A1 (en) 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Broadcom Corporation Multi-mode rfid tag architecture
US20080259846A1 (en) 2007-04-18 2008-10-23 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device
US20080261552A1 (en) 2007-04-19 2008-10-23 Mediatek Inc. Low voltage iq dual mixer
US20080262991A1 (en) 2005-07-01 2008-10-23 Harsh Kapoor Systems and methods for processing data flows
US20080261640A1 (en) 2004-04-14 2008-10-23 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Communication Control Method and Wireless Communication Apparatus
US20080272818A1 (en) 2007-05-02 2008-11-06 Tli Inc. Voltage-controlled oscillator generating output signal finely tunable in wide frequency range and variable delay circuits included therein
US20080279163A1 (en) 2007-05-10 2008-11-13 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device with acknowledge priority
WO2008150122A1 (en) 2007-06-08 2008-12-11 Lg Innotek Co., Ltd Wireless communication device
US20080310067A1 (en) 2007-06-12 2008-12-18 Broadcom Corporation System and method for using a phy to locate a thermal signature in a cable plant for diagnostic, enhanced, and higher power applications
US20080320108A1 (en) 2007-06-20 2008-12-25 Microsoft Corporation Management Policies For Dense Wireless Access Point Infrastructures in Wireless Local Area Networks
US20090005061A1 (en) 2005-12-30 2009-01-01 Trueposition, Inc. Location quality of service indicator
US20090010210A1 (en) 2004-05-07 2009-01-08 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. Method Of Distributive Reservation Of A Medium In A Radio Communications Network
US20090067396A1 (en) 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Fischer Matthew J Method and system for bluetooth (bt) delayed acknowledgement (ack)
US7529548B2 (en) 2001-06-28 2009-05-05 Intel Corporation Method and system for adapting a wireless link to achieve a desired channel quality
US20090137206A1 (en) 2007-11-23 2009-05-28 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of bluetooth and wireless local area network coexistence using a single antenna in a collocated device
US20090170497A1 (en) 2007-12-28 2009-07-02 Guowang Miao Probabilistic interference mitigation for wireless cellular networks
US20090168686A1 (en) 2006-08-31 2009-07-02 Motorola, Inc. Adaptive Broadcast Multicast Systems in Wireless Communication Networks
US20090168725A1 (en) 2007-12-26 2009-07-02 Qualcomm Incorporated Communication handover management
US7564826B2 (en) 2005-07-13 2009-07-21 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of synchronization and beaconing in a WLAN mesh network
US20090190541A1 (en) 2008-01-28 2009-07-30 Saied Abedi Communication systems
US20090196210A1 (en) 2008-02-03 2009-08-06 Broadcom Corporation Collaborative coexistence of co-located mobile wimax, wireless lan, and/or bluetooth radios
WO2009101567A1 (en) 2008-02-12 2009-08-20 Nxp B.V. Wireless communications arrangement, network and approach therefor to manage a shared channel among different wireless systems
US20090209288A1 (en) 2008-02-06 2009-08-20 Broadcom Corporation Handheld computing unit of a computing device with an extended computing unit
US20090240998A1 (en) 2006-05-02 2009-09-24 Ant-Advanced Network Technologies Oy Method and system for wireless real-time transmission of multichannel audio or video data
US20090239471A1 (en) 2008-03-18 2009-09-24 Ninh Tran Bluetooth and wlan coexistence architecture having a shared low noise amplifier
US7595768B2 (en) 2003-06-27 2009-09-29 Intel Corporation Switching schemes for multiple antennas
US20090247217A1 (en) 2008-03-27 2009-10-01 Mediatek Inc. Apparatus and method for wireless communications capable of bluetooth, wireless local area network (wlan) and wimax communications
US20090245279A1 (en) 2008-03-31 2009-10-01 Mediatek Inc. Apparatus and method for coordinating bluetooth and wireless local area network (wlan) and wimax communications
US20090245133A1 (en) 2008-03-31 2009-10-01 Intel Corporation Broadcast/multicast based network discovery
US7599671B2 (en) 2005-08-08 2009-10-06 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Radar detection apparatus and method thereof
US20090268652A1 (en) 2008-04-29 2009-10-29 Nokia Corporation Power management mode aware mesh beacon collision avoidance and information update mechanism
US7616935B2 (en) 2001-11-09 2009-11-10 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for matching receiver carrier frequency
US20090280762A1 (en) 2008-05-09 2009-11-12 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. High-order harmonic rejection mixer using current steering technique
US20090285264A1 (en) 2008-05-13 2009-11-19 Carlos Aldana Method and System for Detection of Long Pulse Bin 5 Radars in the Presence of Greenfield Packets
US20090291640A1 (en) 2008-05-22 2009-11-26 Qualcomm Incorporated System and method to enable resource partitioning in wireless networks
US7626966B1 (en) 2005-01-06 2009-12-01 Idealab Ad hoc wireless communication system
US7627025B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-01 Broadcom Corporation Echo canceller gain control for channel diagnostic systems
US7627026B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-01 Broadcom Corporation Threshold setting using piecewise linear approximation for channel diagnostic systems
US20090312027A1 (en) 2008-06-17 2009-12-17 Foschini G J Method for adaptive formation of cell clusters for cellular wireless networks with coordinated transmission and reception
US20090311961A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2009-12-17 Raja Banerjea Short-Range Wireless Communication
US7636388B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-22 Broadcom Corporation Channel fault detection for channel diagnostic systems
US20090321056A1 (en) 2008-03-11 2009-12-31 Tessera, Inc. Multi-stage electrohydrodynamic fluid accelerator apparatus
US20100011231A1 (en) 2008-07-11 2010-01-14 Raja Banerjea Access point rotation for sharing power load
US20100009675A1 (en) 2008-07-14 2010-01-14 Nokia Corporation Setup of device-to-device connection
US7656205B2 (en) 2008-01-21 2010-02-02 National Taiwan University Dual-injection locked frequency dividing circuit
US20100029325A1 (en) 2008-07-29 2010-02-04 Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Ab Apparatus and method to improve wlan performance in a dual wlan modality environment
US7659003B2 (en) 2004-10-28 2010-02-09 Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd. Silicone composition and a pressure sensitive adhesive film having a pressure sensitive adhesive layer made from the composition
US7672645B2 (en) 2006-06-15 2010-03-02 Bitwave Semiconductor, Inc. Programmable transmitter architecture for non-constant and constant envelope modulation
US20100052796A1 (en) 2008-08-29 2010-03-04 Infineon Technologies Ag Device Having Digitally Controlled Oscillator
US20100062799A1 (en) 2006-11-08 2010-03-11 Ntt Docomo, Inc. Mobile communication system, base station, mobile station, and communication control method
US20100061244A1 (en) 2006-11-16 2010-03-11 Nortel Networks Limited System and method for delivering packet data over a multiplicity of communication links
US20100069112A1 (en) 2008-09-15 2010-03-18 Texas Instruments Incorporated Scheduling transmissions in coexisting wireless networks
US7689190B2 (en) 2004-09-30 2010-03-30 St-Ericsson Sa Controlling the frequency of an oscillator
US20100082957A1 (en) 2008-10-01 2010-04-01 Fujitsu Limited Information processing device
US20100080319A1 (en) 2008-09-30 2010-04-01 Thomas Blocher High Bandwidth Modulation and Transmission
US20100097952A1 (en) 2006-05-12 2010-04-22 Shared Spectrum Company Method and System for Classifying Communication Signals in a Dynamic Spectrum Access System
US20100103867A1 (en) 2007-01-09 2010-04-29 Ntt Docomo, Inc. Base station apparatus, user equipment, and method used in mobile communication system
US7711004B2 (en) 2006-04-18 2010-05-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Multiple broadcast channels for wireless networks
US7717342B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-05-18 Hand Held Products, Inc. Data collection device having dynamic access to multiple wireless networks
US20100130129A1 (en) 2008-11-25 2010-05-27 Jue Chang WLAN and bluetooth harmonization
US20100138549A1 (en) 2008-12-01 2010-06-03 Sandesh Goel Portable ap enhancements
US20100135256A1 (en) 2008-09-04 2010-06-03 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for allocating multiple radio communication periods
US20100165896A1 (en) 2008-12-31 2010-07-01 Michelle Xiaohong Gong Power saving in peer-to-peer communication devices
US20100216497A1 (en) 2005-02-18 2010-08-26 Fujitsu Limited Base station and interference reduction method in base station
US20100248734A1 (en) 2007-03-29 2010-09-30 Kyocera Corporation Communication Control Method, Communication System and Communication Control Apparatus
US7826411B2 (en) 2007-05-10 2010-11-02 Broadcom Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device with shared modules
US20100283654A1 (en) 2007-06-22 2010-11-11 Texas Instruments Incorporated Digital phase locked loop with dithering
US20100293293A1 (en) 2008-05-15 2010-11-18 Beser Nurettin Burcak Systems and Methods for Fractional Routing Redundancy
US20100303026A1 (en) 2009-05-29 2010-12-02 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for zone controller based dynamic spectrum allocation
US7849333B2 (en) 2006-05-08 2010-12-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Inline power allocation for power over Ethernet applications
US20100316027A1 (en) 2009-06-16 2010-12-16 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for dynamic and dual antenna bluetooth (bt)/wlan coexistence
US20100322213A1 (en) 2009-06-23 2010-12-23 Huaiyu Liu Service discovery in a wireless network
US20110002226A1 (en) 2005-06-24 2011-01-06 Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories Method for Discovering Routes in Wireless Communications Networks
US20110007675A1 (en) 2009-07-09 2011-01-13 Mediatek Inc. System for the coexistence between a plurality of wireless communication module sharing single antenna
US20110009074A1 (en) 2009-07-09 2011-01-13 Mediatek Inc. Systems and methods for coexistence between plurality of wireless communications modules sharing single antenna
US7876786B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2011-01-25 Microsoft Corporation Dynamic time-spectrum block allocation for cognitive radio networks
US20110021240A1 (en) 2008-03-25 2011-01-27 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Dynamic Power Control of User Equipment
US7881746B2 (en) 2007-05-10 2011-02-01 Broadcom Corporation Shared processing between wireless interface devices of a host device
US7898948B2 (en) 2006-10-23 2011-03-01 Interdigital Technology Corporation Method and apparatus for sending a channel quality indication via a shared channel
EP2299642A2 (en) 2009-09-14 2011-03-23 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft A method meeting the spectral mask in a radiofrequency identification system and a device therefor
US20110097998A1 (en) 2009-10-26 2011-04-28 Mediatek Inc. System and methods for enhancing coexistence efficiency for multi-radio terminals
US7936714B1 (en) 2002-03-11 2011-05-03 Netgear, Inc. Spectrum allocation system and method for multi-band wireless RF data communications
US20110103363A1 (en) 2006-04-06 2011-05-05 Broadcom Corporation Access point multi-level transmission power control based on the exchange of characteristics
WO2011056878A1 (en) 2009-11-04 2011-05-12 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for peer discovery in a wireless communication network
US7957340B2 (en) 2003-09-17 2011-06-07 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method of allocating frequency subband and apparatus adopting the same
US7966036B2 (en) 2005-12-16 2011-06-21 Fujitsu Limited Wireless LAN device and communication mode switching method
US20110161697A1 (en) 2009-12-24 2011-06-30 Qi Emily H Method and system for discoverability of power saving p2p devices
US20110188391A1 (en) 2010-02-04 2011-08-04 Texas Instruments Incorporated INTERRELATED WiFi AND USB PROTOCOLS AND OTHER APPLICATION FRAMEWORK PROCESSES, CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS
US7995544B2 (en) 2001-11-02 2011-08-09 At&T Intellectual Property Ii, L.P. Wireless LANs and neighborhood capture
US20110194519A1 (en) 2004-06-16 2011-08-11 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Distributed resource reservation in a wireless adhoc network
US8000715B2 (en) 2005-08-04 2011-08-16 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Method and system for dynamic spectrum allocation, and computer program product therefor
US20110205924A1 (en) 2005-03-09 2011-08-25 Broadcom Corporation Collision avoidance in multiple protocol communication networks using a shared communication medium
US8014329B2 (en) 2007-07-03 2011-09-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Path selection and power management in mesh networks
US20110274040A1 (en) 2010-02-12 2011-11-10 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Method and apparatus for optimizing uplink random access channel transmission
US8060017B2 (en) 2008-04-04 2011-11-15 Powerwave Cognition, Inc. Methods and systems for a mobile, broadband, routable internet
US8077652B2 (en) 2006-10-03 2011-12-13 Viasat, Inc. MF-TDMA frequency hopping
US8078111B2 (en) 2008-07-29 2011-12-13 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus for using multiple frequency bands for communication
US8081038B2 (en) 2008-12-22 2011-12-20 Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute Ring oscillator having wide frequency range
US20120020319A1 (en) 2007-08-20 2012-01-26 Yang Song Cooperative mimo among base stations with low information interaction, a method and apparatus for scheduling the same
US8107391B2 (en) 2008-11-19 2012-01-31 Wi-Lan, Inc. Systems and etiquette for home gateways using white space
US20120025921A1 (en) 2010-07-31 2012-02-02 Quintic Holdings Low Noise VCO Circuit Having Low Noise Bias
US8126502B2 (en) 2007-12-31 2012-02-28 Intel Corporation Channel width switching in multiple OBSS systems
US8140075B2 (en) 2003-11-28 2012-03-20 Hitachi, Ltd. Wireless communication system, server and mobile station therefor
US8139670B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2012-03-20 Marvell International Ltd. Modular MIMO transceiver architecture
US8150328B2 (en) 2008-09-17 2012-04-03 Motorola Solutions, Inc. Method and apparatus for distributed sensing management and control within a cognitive radio network
US8149715B1 (en) 2007-07-17 2012-04-03 Marvell International Ltd. Mesh network operations
US20120087341A1 (en) 2010-10-11 2012-04-12 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. In-device interference avoidance method and apparatus for terminal equipped with multiple communication modules
US8165102B1 (en) 2005-03-14 2012-04-24 Ozmo, Inc. Apparatus and method for integrating short-range wireless personal area networks for a wireless local area network infrastructure
US20120099476A1 (en) 2010-10-20 2012-04-26 Brian Mahaffy Pre-Association Discovery
US8170546B2 (en) 2006-03-22 2012-05-01 Broadcom Corporation Client device characterization of other client device transmissions and reporting of signal qualities to access point(s)
US8170002B2 (en) 2007-05-31 2012-05-01 Conexant Systems, Inc. Systems and methods for indicating buffered data at an access point with efficient beacon handling
EP2456275A1 (en) 2010-11-22 2012-05-23 Inside Secure Radiocommunication device comprising an UHF tag reader
US8189506B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-05-29 Nokia Corporation Deep sleep mode for mesh points
US8229087B2 (en) 2006-03-31 2012-07-24 Fujitsu Limited Relay apparatus, relay method, relay program, and communication system
US20120195397A1 (en) 2007-03-27 2012-08-02 Motorola, Inc. Channel estimator with high noise suppression and low interpolation error for ofdm systems
US20120213208A1 (en) 2009-03-06 2012-08-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for shared communication medium in wireless communication systems
US20120213162A1 (en) 2011-02-18 2012-08-23 Changhoi Koo Method and Apparatus for Avoiding In-Device Coexistence Interference with Preferred Frequency Notification
US8254296B1 (en) 2009-03-19 2012-08-28 Marvell International Ltd. Peer-to-peer frequency band negotiation
US8275314B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2012-09-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth scan modes
US8274894B2 (en) 2008-05-07 2012-09-25 Nokia Corporation Quality of service and power aware forwarding rules for mesh points in wireless mesh networks
US20120244805A1 (en) 2011-03-21 2012-09-27 Nokia Corporation Method and apparatus for battery with secure element
US20120276938A1 (en) 2011-04-29 2012-11-01 Sarang Shrikrishna Wagholikar Multi-technology coexistence for ibss networks
US8310967B1 (en) 2008-06-19 2012-11-13 Marvell International Ltd. Infrastructure and ad-hoc node device
US20120294396A1 (en) 2009-05-26 2012-11-22 Broadcom Corporation Direct detection of wireless interferers in a communication device for multiple modulation types
US8340034B1 (en) 2009-11-11 2012-12-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth and wireless LAN arbitration
US20120327779A1 (en) 2009-06-12 2012-12-27 Cygnus Broadband, Inc. Systems and methods for congestion detection for use in prioritizing and scheduling packets in a communication network
US8364188B2 (en) 2010-06-04 2013-01-29 Alcatel Lucent Method and controller for allocating whitespace spectrum
US20130057344A1 (en) 2008-04-18 2013-03-07 Stmicroelectronics (Grenoble) Sas Differential rf amplifier
US20130114548A1 (en) 2008-03-10 2013-05-09 Marvell International Ltd. Coexistence and collocation of remote network and local network radios
US20130130684A1 (en) 2010-04-02 2013-05-23 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Group Procedures For Machine Typ Communication Devices
US8472968B1 (en) 2008-08-11 2013-06-25 Marvell International Ltd. Location-based detection of interference in cellular communications systems
US8472427B1 (en) 2009-04-06 2013-06-25 Marvell International Ltd. Packet exchange arbitration for coexisting radios
US20130176903A1 (en) 2012-01-09 2013-07-11 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Methods and Apparatus for Establishing a Tunneled Direct Link Setup (TDLS) Session Between Devices in a Wireless Network
WO2013119810A1 (en) 2012-02-07 2013-08-15 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-network communication
US20130225068A1 (en) 2012-02-24 2013-08-29 Nokia Corporation Method, apparatus, and computer program product for coexistence-aware communication mechanism for multi-radios
US8532041B1 (en) 2009-04-24 2013-09-10 Marvell International Ltd. Method for transmitting information in a regulated spectrum and network configured to operate in the regulated spectrum
US8553561B1 (en) 2007-08-22 2013-10-08 Marvell International Ltd. Quality of service for mesh networks
US20130287043A1 (en) 2003-10-15 2013-10-31 Qualcomm Incorporated High speed media access control
US8577305B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2013-11-05 Marvell International Ltd. Circuits and methods for generating oscillating signals
US8588705B1 (en) 2007-12-11 2013-11-19 Marvell International Ltd. System and method of determining Power over Ethernet impairment
US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-12-03 Marvell International Ltd Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US20140004794A1 (en) 2012-07-02 2014-01-02 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Shaping Near-Field Transmission Signals
US20140043966A1 (en) 2012-08-07 2014-02-13 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for data traffic offloading and apparatus using the same
US8655278B2 (en) 2011-06-20 2014-02-18 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Band steering
US8665848B2 (en) 2008-04-24 2014-03-04 Conexant Systems, Inc. Systems and methods of combined Bluetooth and WLAN signaling

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8041318B2 (en) * 2008-06-17 2011-10-18 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Relative frequency error compensation for multi-carrier receivers

Patent Citations (330)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4337463A (en) 1980-08-22 1982-06-29 Control Data Corporation Time synchronization master station and remote station system
US4805215A (en) 1986-10-01 1989-02-14 Racal Data Communications Inc. Adaptive echo canceller with sparse dynamically positioned taps
US5347234A (en) 1993-03-26 1994-09-13 International Business Machines Corp. Digital voltage controlled oscillator
US5673291A (en) 1994-09-14 1997-09-30 Ericsson Inc. Simultaneous demodulation and decoding of a digitally modulated radio signal using known symbols
US5634207A (en) 1995-02-13 1997-05-27 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency converter capable of reducing noise components in local oscillation signals
US5995819A (en) 1995-11-22 1999-11-30 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency converter and radio receiver using same
US5708656A (en) 1996-09-11 1998-01-13 Nokia Mobile Phones Limited Method and apparatus for packet data transmission
US5847616A (en) 1996-12-12 1998-12-08 Tritech Microelectronics International, Ltd. Embedded voltage controlled oscillator with minimum sensitivity to process and supply
US6167245A (en) 1998-05-29 2000-12-26 Silicon Laboratories, Inc. Method and apparatus for operating a PLL with a phase detector/sample hold circuit for synthesizing high-frequency signals for wireless communications
US6741846B1 (en) 1998-05-29 2004-05-25 Silicon Laboratories Inc. Method and apparatus for operating a PLL with a phase detector/sample hold circuit for synthesizing high-frequency signals for wireless communications
US6347091B1 (en) 1998-06-19 2002-02-12 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Method and apparatus for dynamically adapting a connection state in a mobile communications system
US6285262B1 (en) 1998-06-30 2001-09-04 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Frequency divider, a phase lock oscillator and a flip-flop circuit using the frequency divider
US20070077908A1 (en) 1998-11-12 2007-04-05 Broadcom Corporation Fully integrated tuner architecture
US6553229B1 (en) 1998-11-24 2003-04-22 Ericsson Inc. Signal scanning systems and methods for multiple-mode cellular radiotelephones
US6320919B1 (en) 1998-11-30 2001-11-20 Ericsson Inc. Adaptive channel characterization using decoded symbols
US6366622B1 (en) 1998-12-18 2002-04-02 Silicon Wave, Inc. Apparatus and method for wireless communications
US20060063509A1 (en) 1999-01-12 2006-03-23 David Pincu System for providing power over Ethernet through a patch panel
US6754189B1 (en) 1999-04-08 2004-06-22 Lucent Technologies Inc. Method of queue length based burst management in wireless communication systems
US6640308B1 (en) 1999-04-16 2003-10-28 Invensys Systems, Inc. System and method of powering and communicating field ethernet device for an instrumentation and control using a single pair of powered ethernet wire
US6452458B1 (en) 1999-04-30 2002-09-17 Nec Corporation Voltage-controlled oscillator
US6946950B1 (en) 1999-07-12 2005-09-20 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Mobile body discrimination apparatus for rapidly acquiring respective data sets transmitted through modulation of reflected radio waves by transponders which are within a communication region of an interrogator apparatus
US6816452B1 (en) 1999-07-14 2004-11-09 Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. Vehicle-to-roadside communication system, roadside communication station, and on-board mobile station
US6954708B2 (en) 1999-08-11 2005-10-11 Broadcom Corporation System and method for detecting a device requiring power
US20050186962A1 (en) 1999-09-08 2005-08-25 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Mobile station and base station
US6675328B1 (en) 1999-10-08 2004-01-06 Vigilant Networks, Llc System and method to determine data throughput in a communication network
US20110053522A1 (en) 1999-10-21 2011-03-03 Broadcom Corporation Adaptive radio transceiver
US20080045162A1 (en) 1999-10-21 2008-02-21 Broadcom Corporation Adaptive radio transceiver
US7139540B2 (en) 1999-10-21 2006-11-21 Broadcom Corporation Adaptive radio transceiver with calibration
US6519461B1 (en) 1999-10-29 2003-02-11 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Channel-type switching from a common channel to a dedicated channel based on common channel load
US6374117B1 (en) 1999-12-22 2002-04-16 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Queue based power control scheduling
US6535037B2 (en) 2000-02-04 2003-03-18 James Maligeorgos Injection locked frequency multiplier
US20020049854A1 (en) 2000-03-10 2002-04-25 Cox Michael Stefan IP/data traffic allocating method to maintain QoS
US6922433B2 (en) 2000-03-29 2005-07-26 Nec Corporation CDMA demodulation circuit and CDMA demodulation method
WO2001078252A1 (en) 2000-04-07 2001-10-18 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Radio communication system and method of controlling downlink transmission power or bit rate
US6438364B1 (en) 2000-06-06 2002-08-20 Philips Electronics North America Corporation Radio frequency device with fast charging of an input capacitance
US20020025810A1 (en) 2000-07-11 2002-02-28 Takashi Takayama High-speed roaming method of wireless LAN
US6738358B2 (en) 2000-09-09 2004-05-18 Intel Corporation Network echo canceller for integrated telecommunications processing
US20060189359A1 (en) 2000-09-28 2006-08-24 David Kammer Power-conserving intuitive device discovery technique in a Bluetooth environment
US6934566B2 (en) 2000-12-21 2005-08-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Wireless communication device and controlling method thereof
US6509777B2 (en) 2001-01-23 2003-01-21 Resonext Communications, Inc. Method and apparatus for reducing DC offset
US20020102941A1 (en) 2001-01-31 2002-08-01 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Measurement method and device for activating interfrequency handover in a wireless telecommunication network
US6741862B2 (en) 2001-02-07 2004-05-25 Airvana, Inc. Enhanced reverse-link rate control in wireless communication
US20040044489A1 (en) 2001-03-16 2004-03-04 Jones Keith R. Optical sequence time domain reflectometry during data transmission
US20030040316A1 (en) 2001-03-22 2003-02-27 Peter Stanforth Prioritized-routing for an ad-hoc, peer-to-peer, mobile radio access system based on battery-power levels and type of service
US20080076466A1 (en) 2001-04-09 2008-03-27 Peter Larsson Instantaneous joint transmit power control and link adaptation for RTS/CTS based channel access
WO2002082751A2 (en) 2001-04-09 2002-10-17 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Instantaneous joint transmit power control and link adaptation for rts/cts based channel access
WO2002091623A1 (en) 2001-05-10 2002-11-14 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Updating path loss estimation for power control and link adaption in ieee 802.11h wlan
US7206840B2 (en) 2001-05-11 2007-04-17 Koninklike Philips Electronics N.V. Dynamic frequency selection scheme for IEEE 802.11 WLANs
US7529548B2 (en) 2001-06-28 2009-05-05 Intel Corporation Method and system for adapting a wireless link to achieve a desired channel quality
US20090202013A1 (en) 2001-06-28 2009-08-13 Sebastian Peroor K Wireless communication network and method for extended-range uplink communications
US6650195B1 (en) 2001-07-30 2003-11-18 Xilinx, Inc. Oscillator with differential tunable tank circuit
US7079811B2 (en) 2001-08-15 2006-07-18 Qualcomm, Incorporated Dual mode bluetooth/wireless device with power conservation features
US20050018641A1 (en) 2001-09-03 2005-01-27 Chunming Zhao Method and equipment for regulating dynamically an average area of a channel estimation
US7995544B2 (en) 2001-11-02 2011-08-09 At&T Intellectual Property Ii, L.P. Wireless LANs and neighborhood capture
US7616935B2 (en) 2001-11-09 2009-11-10 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for matching receiver carrier frequency
US6816718B2 (en) 2002-02-07 2004-11-09 Rf Micro Devices, Inc. DC offset correction using dummy amplifier
US20030148750A1 (en) 2002-02-07 2003-08-07 Yan Kelvin Kai Tuan DC offset correction using dummy amplifier
US7936714B1 (en) 2002-03-11 2011-05-03 Netgear, Inc. Spectrum allocation system and method for multi-band wireless RF data communications
US20110164538A1 (en) 2002-03-11 2011-07-07 Adaptix, Inc. Spectrum Allocation System and Method for Multi-Band Wireless RF Data Communications
US20030198200A1 (en) 2002-04-22 2003-10-23 Cognio, Inc. System and Method for Spectrum Management of a Shared Frequency Band
US7403018B1 (en) 2002-06-07 2008-07-22 Marvell International Ltd. Cable tester
US7173431B1 (en) 2002-06-07 2007-02-06 Marvell International Ltd. Cable tester
US20040162106A1 (en) 2002-08-14 2004-08-19 Monroe Robert L. Method and apparatus for mitigating radio frequency interference between transceiver systems
US20060007863A1 (en) 2002-09-05 2006-01-12 Siamak Naghian Signal propagation delay routing
US20040063403A1 (en) 2002-09-30 2004-04-01 Durrant Randolph L. Methods for identification of IEEE 802.11b radio signals
US7239882B1 (en) 2002-11-25 2007-07-03 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Method and system for brokering frequencies to facilitate peer-to-peer communication
US20040105401A1 (en) 2002-12-02 2004-06-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for reducing power consumption in ad-hoc network
US20040110470A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2004-06-10 Tsien Chih C. Method and apparatus to control transmitter
US20070142080A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2007-06-21 Renesas Technology Corp Direct-conversion transmitter circuit and transceiver system
US20100238793A1 (en) 2003-01-23 2010-09-23 Research In Motion Limited Methods And Apparatus For Re-Establishing Communication For Wireless Communication For A Wireless Communication Device After A Communication Loss In A Wireless Communication Network
US20070178888A1 (en) 2003-01-23 2007-08-02 Research In Motion Limited Methods and apparatus for re-establishing communication for a wireless communication device after a communication loss in a wireless communication network
US20040192222A1 (en) 2003-03-26 2004-09-30 Nokia Corporation System and method for semi-simultaneously coupling an antenna to transceivers
US20040198297A1 (en) 2003-04-01 2004-10-07 Oh Seung Min Quadrature signal generator with feedback type frequency doubler
US20040214575A1 (en) 2003-04-22 2004-10-28 Vladan Jovanovic Method of handoff at the border between CDMA underlay and overlay systems
US20040233881A1 (en) 2003-05-06 2004-11-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Route discovery device and method in a mobile ad-hoc network
US20050064840A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2005-03-24 The Regents Of The University Of California Wideband distributed mixers
US7595768B2 (en) 2003-06-27 2009-09-29 Intel Corporation Switching schemes for multiple antennas
US20050058151A1 (en) 2003-06-30 2005-03-17 Chihsiang Yeh Method of interference management for interference/collision avoidance and spatial reuse enhancement
US7212798B1 (en) 2003-07-17 2007-05-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Adaptive AGC in a wireless network receiver
US20050025104A1 (en) 2003-07-30 2005-02-03 Fischer Michael Andrew Managing coexistence of separate protocols sharing the same communications channel
US20050025174A1 (en) 2003-07-30 2005-02-03 Fischer Michael Andrew Managing an access point in the presence of separate protocols that share the same communications channel
US7257095B2 (en) 2003-07-30 2007-08-14 Texas Instruments Incorporated Power saving via physical layer address filtering in WLANs
US20050038876A1 (en) 2003-08-15 2005-02-17 Aloke Chaudhuri System and method for instant match based on location, presence, personalization and communication
US7957340B2 (en) 2003-09-17 2011-06-07 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method of allocating frequency subband and apparatus adopting the same
US20070202814A1 (en) 2003-10-01 2007-08-30 Ikuya Ono Wireless communication semiconductor integrated circuit device and wireless communication system
US20130287043A1 (en) 2003-10-15 2013-10-31 Qualcomm Incorporated High speed media access control
US20050090218A1 (en) 2003-10-24 2005-04-28 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Oscillation device and mobile communication apparatus
US20080027033A1 (en) 2003-11-19 2008-01-31 Acrux Dds Pty Ltd Method and Composition for Treatment of Cutaneous Lesions
US8140075B2 (en) 2003-11-28 2012-03-20 Hitachi, Ltd. Wireless communication system, server and mobile station therefor
US20050120119A1 (en) 2003-12-01 2005-06-02 Microsoft Corporation Smart scan for bluetooth pan devices
US20060128347A1 (en) 2003-12-02 2006-06-15 Pramote Piriyapoksombut Radio integrated circuit with integrated power amplifier
US20050135360A1 (en) 2003-12-19 2005-06-23 Changmin Shin Method of providing routing protocol in sensor network
US7342895B2 (en) 2004-01-30 2008-03-11 Mark Serpa Method and system for peer-to-peer wireless communication over unlicensed communication spectrum
US20050174962A1 (en) 2004-02-05 2005-08-11 David Gurevich Generic client for communication devices
US20050206554A1 (en) 2004-02-09 2005-09-22 Sony Corporation Wireless communication system, wireless communication apparatus, wireless communication method, and computer program
US20070206519A1 (en) 2004-02-13 2007-09-06 Broadcom Cororation, A California Corporation RF transceiver configuring for a MIMO communication
US7377441B2 (en) 2004-03-05 2008-05-27 Microvision, Inc. Electronic device with auxiliary interfaces
US20050215197A1 (en) 2004-03-29 2005-09-29 Chen Camille C Apparatus and methods for coexistence of collocated wireless local area network and bluetooth based on dynamic fragmentation of WLAN packets
US7734253B2 (en) 2004-03-29 2010-06-08 Intel Corporation Apparatus and methods for coexistence of collocated wireless local area network and bluetooth® based on dynamic fragmentation of WLAN packets
US20080137580A1 (en) 2004-04-05 2008-06-12 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Method, Communication Device and System For Address Resolution Mapping In a Wireless Multihop Ad Hoc Network
US20080261640A1 (en) 2004-04-14 2008-10-23 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Communication Control Method and Wireless Communication Apparatus
US20050250528A1 (en) 2004-04-16 2005-11-10 Hak-Hoon Song System of wireless local area network based on transmit power control and method for controlling transmit power
US20050281278A1 (en) 2004-05-05 2005-12-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for adaptive delay management
US20090010210A1 (en) 2004-05-07 2009-01-08 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. Method Of Distributive Reservation Of A Medium In A Radio Communications Network
US20050254423A1 (en) 2004-05-12 2005-11-17 Nokia Corporation Rate shaper algorithm
US20110194519A1 (en) 2004-06-16 2011-08-11 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Distributed resource reservation in a wireless adhoc network
US7627026B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-01 Broadcom Corporation Threshold setting using piecewise linear approximation for channel diagnostic systems
US7636388B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-22 Broadcom Corporation Channel fault detection for channel diagnostic systems
US7627025B2 (en) 2004-07-01 2009-12-01 Broadcom Corporation Echo canceller gain control for channel diagnostic systems
US20080095058A1 (en) 2004-07-09 2008-04-24 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. Data Transmission in a Communication Network
US20060049880A1 (en) 2004-09-03 2006-03-09 Hans-Martin Rein Voltage controlled oscillator (vco) with output buffer
US20060079232A1 (en) 2004-09-22 2006-04-13 Nec Corporation Wireless LAN handover method, wireless terminal, program product for use in the wireless terminal, and wireless communications system
US7689190B2 (en) 2004-09-30 2010-03-30 St-Ericsson Sa Controlling the frequency of an oscillator
US20060239443A1 (en) 2004-10-15 2006-10-26 Oxford William V Videoconferencing echo cancellers
US20090175250A1 (en) 2004-10-20 2009-07-09 Saurabh Mathur Method for mobile terminal access to wireless lan based on access point services and service parameters
WO2006043956A1 (en) 2004-10-20 2006-04-27 Thomson Licensing Method for mobile terminal access to wireless lan based on access point services and service parameters
US7659003B2 (en) 2004-10-28 2010-02-09 Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd. Silicone composition and a pressure sensitive adhesive film having a pressure sensitive adhesive layer made from the composition
US20060114044A1 (en) 2004-11-30 2006-06-01 Svilen Mintchev Differential delay cell having controllable amplitude output
US20060120338A1 (en) 2004-12-08 2006-06-08 Bo-Seung Hwang System and method for controlling transmission power in wireless local area network
US20060128308A1 (en) 2004-12-10 2006-06-15 Texas Instruments Incorporated Low power bluetooth page and inquiry scan
JP2006174162A (en) 2004-12-16 2006-06-29 Canon Inc Wireless access point
US7626966B1 (en) 2005-01-06 2009-12-01 Idealab Ad hoc wireless communication system
US20100216497A1 (en) 2005-02-18 2010-08-26 Fujitsu Limited Base station and interference reduction method in base station
WO2006090254A1 (en) 2005-02-25 2006-08-31 Nokia Corporation Method and system for voip over wlan to bluetooth headset using advanced esco scheduling
US20060200862A1 (en) 2005-03-03 2006-09-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for locating rogue access point switch ports in a wireless network related patent applications
US20060199565A1 (en) 2005-03-07 2006-09-07 Wialan Technology A Florida Corporation Enhancement to the IEEE 802.11 protocol handshake
US20110205924A1 (en) 2005-03-09 2011-08-25 Broadcom Corporation Collision avoidance in multiple protocol communication networks using a shared communication medium
US20070109973A1 (en) 2005-03-09 2007-05-17 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Co-location interference avoidance in multiple protocol communication networks
US20080170550A1 (en) 2005-03-10 2008-07-17 Hang Liu Hybrid Mesh Routing Protocol
US20060215601A1 (en) 2005-03-14 2006-09-28 H-Stream Wireless, Inc. Method and apparatus for coordinating a wireless PAN network and a wireless LAN network
US8165102B1 (en) 2005-03-14 2012-04-24 Ozmo, Inc. Apparatus and method for integrating short-range wireless personal area networks for a wireless local area network infrastructure
US8599814B1 (en) 2005-03-14 2013-12-03 Omega Sub Holdings, Inc. Apparatus and method for integrating short-range wireless personal area networks for a wireless local area network infrastructure
US20060223474A1 (en) 2005-03-29 2006-10-05 Yasunobu Yoshizaki Semiconductor integrated circuit
US20090143043A1 (en) 2005-03-29 2009-06-04 Yasunobu Yoshizaki Semiconductor integrated circuit
US7395040B2 (en) 2005-03-29 2008-07-01 Broadcom Corporation Multiple band multiple input multiple output transceiver integrated circuit
US20070173286A1 (en) 2005-04-04 2007-07-26 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Distribution of shared local oscillation to multiple RF intefaces of a wireless device
US20060264179A1 (en) 2005-05-02 2006-11-23 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Method and device for managing signal measurements in a wireless network
US20060268756A1 (en) 2005-05-03 2006-11-30 Hong Kong Applied Science And Technology Research Institute Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for efficient hand-off in wireless networks
US20060252418A1 (en) 2005-05-06 2006-11-09 Quinn Liam B Systems and methods for RF spectrum management
US20060251198A1 (en) 2005-05-09 2006-11-09 Xiaoqiang Ma Systems, methods, and apparatus for phase noise mitigation
US20060268804A1 (en) 2005-05-12 2006-11-30 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for scheduling in WLAN mesh communication system
US20060282667A1 (en) 2005-05-12 2006-12-14 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for performing re-association due to handover in a WLAN mesh network
US7298183B2 (en) 2005-06-01 2007-11-20 Wilinx Corp. High frequency divider circuits and methods
US20070223430A1 (en) 2005-06-02 2007-09-27 Prasanna Desai Method and apparatus for enabling simultaneous VoWLAN and Bluetooth audio in small form factor handheld devices
US20060282541A1 (en) 2005-06-13 2006-12-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Method for setting communication parameters and communication device
US20060281404A1 (en) 2005-06-13 2006-12-14 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Relay system and method for cellular communication
JP2007028568A (en) 2005-06-14 2007-02-01 Ntt Docomo Inc Base station, mobile station, and power control method
US20060286935A1 (en) 2005-06-21 2006-12-21 Yoriko Utsunomiya Apparatus and method for wireless communication
US20110002226A1 (en) 2005-06-24 2011-01-06 Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories Method for Discovering Routes in Wireless Communications Networks
US20080262991A1 (en) 2005-07-01 2008-10-23 Harsh Kapoor Systems and methods for processing data flows
US20070010247A1 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-01-11 Mouna-Kingue Michel S Detection of invalid channel
US20070010237A1 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-01-11 Airgo Networks, Inc. Mac-level protection for networking extended-range and legacy devices in a wireless network
US7310023B2 (en) 2005-07-05 2007-12-18 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Frequency synthesizer
WO2007008981A1 (en) 2005-07-11 2007-01-18 Qualcomm Incorporated Coordinating communication for multiple wireless communication protocols co-located in a single electronic device
US7564826B2 (en) 2005-07-13 2009-07-21 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of synchronization and beaconing in a WLAN mesh network
US20070014314A1 (en) 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Bellsouth Intellectual Property Corporation Peer-to-peer synchronization of data between devices
US20070026810A1 (en) 2005-08-01 2007-02-01 Love Robert T Channel quality indicator for time, frequency and spatial channel in terrestrial radio access network
US8000715B2 (en) 2005-08-04 2011-08-16 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Method and system for dynamic spectrum allocation, and computer program product therefor
US7599671B2 (en) 2005-08-08 2009-10-06 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Radar detection apparatus and method thereof
US7319849B2 (en) 2005-08-25 2008-01-15 Microtune (Texas), L.P. Radio-frequency tuner with differential converter
US7717342B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-05-18 Hand Held Products, Inc. Data collection device having dynamic access to multiple wireless networks
US8256681B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2012-09-04 Hand Held Products, Inc. Data collection device having dynamic access to multiple wireless networks
US8496181B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2013-07-30 Hand Held Products, Inc. Data collection device having dynamic access to multiple wireless networks
US20070081553A1 (en) 2005-10-12 2007-04-12 Finisar Corporation Network tap device powered by power over ethernet
US20070103829A1 (en) 2005-11-10 2007-05-10 Powerdsine, Ltd. Enhanced Classification for Power Over Ethernet
WO2007064822A3 (en) 2005-12-01 2007-11-22 Ruckus Wireless Inc On-demand services by wireless base station virtualization
US7966036B2 (en) 2005-12-16 2011-06-21 Fujitsu Limited Wireless LAN device and communication mode switching method
US20090005061A1 (en) 2005-12-30 2009-01-01 Trueposition, Inc. Location quality of service indicator
US7286009B2 (en) 2005-12-30 2007-10-23 D2Audio Corporation Digital PWM amplifier with simulation-based feedback
US20070200622A1 (en) 2006-01-05 2007-08-30 Stmicroelectronics S.R.L. Modulator apparatus operating at low supply voltage, and corresponding method of modulation
US20070183443A1 (en) 2006-02-08 2007-08-09 Sang-Yeon Won Apparatus and method for transmitting data frame in WLAN terminal
US20070206762A1 (en) 2006-03-06 2007-09-06 Alcatel Multiple criteria based load balancing
US20080056201A1 (en) 2006-03-22 2008-03-06 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Interference parameter reporting from client devices to access point for use in modifying wireless operations
US8170546B2 (en) 2006-03-22 2012-05-01 Broadcom Corporation Client device characterization of other client device transmissions and reporting of signal qualities to access point(s)
US20070238482A1 (en) 2006-03-30 2007-10-11 Giora Rayzman Device, system and method of coordination among multiple transceivers
US8229087B2 (en) 2006-03-31 2012-07-24 Fujitsu Limited Relay apparatus, relay method, relay program, and communication system
US20110103363A1 (en) 2006-04-06 2011-05-05 Broadcom Corporation Access point multi-level transmission power control based on the exchange of characteristics
US7711004B2 (en) 2006-04-18 2010-05-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Multiple broadcast channels for wireless networks
US20070242645A1 (en) 2006-04-18 2007-10-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Battery-efficient generic advertising service for wireless mobile devices
US20090240998A1 (en) 2006-05-02 2009-09-24 Ant-Advanced Network Technologies Oy Method and system for wireless real-time transmission of multichannel audio or video data
US7849333B2 (en) 2006-05-08 2010-12-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Inline power allocation for power over Ethernet applications
US20070264959A1 (en) 2006-05-11 2007-11-15 M/A-Com, Inc. Quadrature sub-harmonic frequency down-converter
US20100097952A1 (en) 2006-05-12 2010-04-22 Shared Spectrum Company Method and System for Classifying Communication Signals in a Dynamic Spectrum Access System
US20070268862A1 (en) 2006-05-18 2007-11-22 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for establishing a connection on a secondary frequency channel for wireless communication
EP1860827A2 (en) 2006-05-24 2007-11-28 Broadcom Corporation Method and system for auto coexistence priority selection for a SCO link
US20070280471A1 (en) 2006-06-02 2007-12-06 Broadcom Corporation Minimizing saturation caused by power transfer in a communication system transformer
US20070286298A1 (en) 2006-06-09 2007-12-13 Choi Yang-Seok Doppler frequency determination for mobile wireless devices
US7672645B2 (en) 2006-06-15 2010-03-02 Bitwave Semiconductor, Inc. Programmable transmitter architecture for non-constant and constant envelope modulation
US20070297388A1 (en) 2006-06-27 2007-12-27 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for routing data in networks
US20090168686A1 (en) 2006-08-31 2009-07-02 Motorola, Inc. Adaptive Broadcast Multicast Systems in Wireless Communication Networks
US20080069034A1 (en) 2006-09-20 2008-03-20 Buddhikot Milind M Interference Aware Routing in Multi-Radio Wireless Mesh Networks
US20080080446A1 (en) 2006-09-28 2008-04-03 Mediatek Inc. Systems and methods for power management in a multiple input multiple output (mimo) wireless local area network (wlan)
US8077652B2 (en) 2006-10-03 2011-12-13 Viasat, Inc. MF-TDMA frequency hopping
US20080095059A1 (en) 2006-10-20 2008-04-24 Stmicroelectronics, Inc. System and method for providing an adaptive value of TTL (Time to Live) for broadcast/multicast messages in a mesh network using a hybrid wireless mesh protocol
US7898948B2 (en) 2006-10-23 2011-03-01 Interdigital Technology Corporation Method and apparatus for sending a channel quality indication via a shared channel
US20080111639A1 (en) 2006-10-27 2008-05-15 Interuniversitair Microelektronica Centrum (Imec) Device and method for generating a signal with predefined transcient at start-up
US20100062799A1 (en) 2006-11-08 2010-03-11 Ntt Docomo, Inc. Mobile communication system, base station, mobile station, and communication control method
US20100061244A1 (en) 2006-11-16 2010-03-11 Nortel Networks Limited System and method for delivering packet data over a multiplicity of communication links
US20080130595A1 (en) 2006-11-30 2008-06-05 Sherif Aly Abdel-Kader Determining identifiers for wireless networks
US20080129118A1 (en) 2006-11-30 2008-06-05 Broadcom Corporation System and method for controlling power delivered to a powered device based on channel impediments
US7876786B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2011-01-25 Microsoft Corporation Dynamic time-spectrum block allocation for cognitive radio networks
US20080139212A1 (en) 2006-12-07 2008-06-12 Motorola, Inc. Apparatus and method for interoperation of various radio links with a piconet link in a wireless device
US20080161031A1 (en) 2006-12-28 2008-07-03 Palm, Inc. Coordination of transmissions in wireless communications devices
US7355416B1 (en) 2007-01-07 2008-04-08 Microsemi Corp.- Analog Mixed Signal Group Ltd. Measurement of cable quality by power over ethernet
US20100103867A1 (en) 2007-01-09 2010-04-29 Ntt Docomo, Inc. Base station apparatus, user equipment, and method used in mobile communication system
US20080181154A1 (en) 2007-01-31 2008-07-31 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of low power wireless local area network independent basic service set mode operation
US20080187003A1 (en) 2007-02-06 2008-08-07 Viasat, Inc. Piggyback requests in scheduled transmission
US20080232287A1 (en) 2007-03-21 2008-09-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for power saving scheduling in wireless local area networks
US20120195397A1 (en) 2007-03-27 2012-08-02 Motorola, Inc. Channel estimator with high noise suppression and low interpolation error for ofdm systems
US20100248734A1 (en) 2007-03-29 2010-09-30 Kyocera Corporation Communication Control Method, Communication System and Communication Control Apparatus
US20080238679A1 (en) 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Broadcom Corporation Multi-mode rfid tag architecture
US20080259846A1 (en) 2007-04-18 2008-10-23 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device
US20080261552A1 (en) 2007-04-19 2008-10-23 Mediatek Inc. Low voltage iq dual mixer
US20080272818A1 (en) 2007-05-02 2008-11-06 Tli Inc. Voltage-controlled oscillator generating output signal finely tunable in wide frequency range and variable delay circuits included therein
US20080279163A1 (en) 2007-05-10 2008-11-13 Broadcom Corporation, A California Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device with acknowledge priority
US7881746B2 (en) 2007-05-10 2011-02-01 Broadcom Corporation Shared processing between wireless interface devices of a host device
US7826411B2 (en) 2007-05-10 2010-11-02 Broadcom Corporation Cooperative transceiving between wireless interface devices of a host device with shared modules
US8170002B2 (en) 2007-05-31 2012-05-01 Conexant Systems, Inc. Systems and methods for indicating buffered data at an access point with efficient beacon handling
WO2008150122A1 (en) 2007-06-08 2008-12-11 Lg Innotek Co., Ltd Wireless communication device
US20080310067A1 (en) 2007-06-12 2008-12-18 Broadcom Corporation System and method for using a phy to locate a thermal signature in a cable plant for diagnostic, enhanced, and higher power applications
US20080320108A1 (en) 2007-06-20 2008-12-25 Microsoft Corporation Management Policies For Dense Wireless Access Point Infrastructures in Wireless Local Area Networks
US20100283654A1 (en) 2007-06-22 2010-11-11 Texas Instruments Incorporated Digital phase locked loop with dithering
US8014329B2 (en) 2007-07-03 2011-09-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Path selection and power management in mesh networks
US8149715B1 (en) 2007-07-17 2012-04-03 Marvell International Ltd. Mesh network operations
US8369782B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2013-02-05 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth wideband scan mode
US8897706B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2014-11-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth wideband scan mode
US8649734B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2014-02-11 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth scan modes
US8275314B1 (en) 2007-08-13 2012-09-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth scan modes
US20120020319A1 (en) 2007-08-20 2012-01-26 Yang Song Cooperative mimo among base stations with low information interaction, a method and apparatus for scheduling the same
US8553561B1 (en) 2007-08-22 2013-10-08 Marvell International Ltd. Quality of service for mesh networks
US8189506B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-05-29 Nokia Corporation Deep sleep mode for mesh points
US20090067396A1 (en) 2007-09-12 2009-03-12 Fischer Matthew J Method and system for bluetooth (bt) delayed acknowledgement (ack)
US8577305B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2013-11-05 Marvell International Ltd. Circuits and methods for generating oscillating signals
US8139670B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2012-03-20 Marvell International Ltd. Modular MIMO transceiver architecture
US20090137206A1 (en) 2007-11-23 2009-05-28 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of bluetooth and wireless local area network coexistence using a single antenna in a collocated device
US8045922B2 (en) 2007-11-23 2011-10-25 Texas Instruments Incorporated Apparatus for and method of bluetooth and wireless local area network coexistence using a single antenna in a collocated device
US8588705B1 (en) 2007-12-11 2013-11-19 Marvell International Ltd. System and method of determining Power over Ethernet impairment
US20090168725A1 (en) 2007-12-26 2009-07-02 Qualcomm Incorporated Communication handover management
US20090170497A1 (en) 2007-12-28 2009-07-02 Guowang Miao Probabilistic interference mitigation for wireless cellular networks
US8126502B2 (en) 2007-12-31 2012-02-28 Intel Corporation Channel width switching in multiple OBSS systems
US20120115420A1 (en) 2007-12-31 2012-05-10 Solomon Trainin Channel width switching in multiple obss systems
US7656205B2 (en) 2008-01-21 2010-02-02 National Taiwan University Dual-injection locked frequency dividing circuit
US20090190541A1 (en) 2008-01-28 2009-07-30 Saied Abedi Communication systems
US8072913B2 (en) 2008-02-03 2011-12-06 Broadcom Corporation Collaborative coexistence of co-located mobile WiMAX, wireless LAN, and/or bluetooth radios
US20090196210A1 (en) 2008-02-03 2009-08-06 Broadcom Corporation Collaborative coexistence of co-located mobile wimax, wireless lan, and/or bluetooth radios
US8526348B2 (en) 2008-02-03 2013-09-03 Broadcom Corporation Collaborative coexistence of co-located mobile WiMAX, wireless LAN, and/or bluetooth radios
US20140003318A1 (en) 2008-02-03 2014-01-02 Broadcom Corporation Collaborative coexistence of co-located mobile WiMAX, wireless LAN, and/or Bluetooth radios
US20090209288A1 (en) 2008-02-06 2009-08-20 Broadcom Corporation Handheld computing unit of a computing device with an extended computing unit
WO2009101567A1 (en) 2008-02-12 2009-08-20 Nxp B.V. Wireless communications arrangement, network and approach therefor to manage a shared channel among different wireless systems
US20130114548A1 (en) 2008-03-10 2013-05-09 Marvell International Ltd. Coexistence and collocation of remote network and local network radios
US20090321056A1 (en) 2008-03-11 2009-12-31 Tessera, Inc. Multi-stage electrohydrodynamic fluid accelerator apparatus
US20090239471A1 (en) 2008-03-18 2009-09-24 Ninh Tran Bluetooth and wlan coexistence architecture having a shared low noise amplifier
US20110021240A1 (en) 2008-03-25 2011-01-27 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Dynamic Power Control of User Equipment
US20090247217A1 (en) 2008-03-27 2009-10-01 Mediatek Inc. Apparatus and method for wireless communications capable of bluetooth, wireless local area network (wlan) and wimax communications
US20090245279A1 (en) 2008-03-31 2009-10-01 Mediatek Inc. Apparatus and method for coordinating bluetooth and wireless local area network (wlan) and wimax communications
US20090245133A1 (en) 2008-03-31 2009-10-01 Intel Corporation Broadcast/multicast based network discovery
US8060017B2 (en) 2008-04-04 2011-11-15 Powerwave Cognition, Inc. Methods and systems for a mobile, broadband, routable internet
US20130057344A1 (en) 2008-04-18 2013-03-07 Stmicroelectronics (Grenoble) Sas Differential rf amplifier
US8665848B2 (en) 2008-04-24 2014-03-04 Conexant Systems, Inc. Systems and methods of combined Bluetooth and WLAN signaling
US20090268652A1 (en) 2008-04-29 2009-10-29 Nokia Corporation Power management mode aware mesh beacon collision avoidance and information update mechanism
US8274894B2 (en) 2008-05-07 2012-09-25 Nokia Corporation Quality of service and power aware forwarding rules for mesh points in wireless mesh networks
US20090280762A1 (en) 2008-05-09 2009-11-12 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. High-order harmonic rejection mixer using current steering technique
US20090285264A1 (en) 2008-05-13 2009-11-19 Carlos Aldana Method and System for Detection of Long Pulse Bin 5 Radars in the Presence of Greenfield Packets
US20100293293A1 (en) 2008-05-15 2010-11-18 Beser Nurettin Burcak Systems and Methods for Fractional Routing Redundancy
US20090291640A1 (en) 2008-05-22 2009-11-26 Qualcomm Incorporated System and method to enable resource partitioning in wireless networks
US20130045688A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2013-02-21 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-Range Wireless Communication
US8571479B2 (en) 2008-06-16 2013-10-29 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-range wireless communication
CN102067689A (en) 2008-06-16 2011-05-18 马维尔国际贸易有限公司 Short-range wireless communication
US8315564B2 (en) 2008-06-16 2012-11-20 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-range wireless communication
US8655279B2 (en) 2008-06-16 2014-02-18 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-range wireless communication
US20090311961A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2009-12-17 Raja Banerjea Short-Range Wireless Communication
US20140073251A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2014-03-13 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-Range Wireless Communication
US20130045687A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2013-02-21 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-Range Wireless Communication
US20090312027A1 (en) 2008-06-17 2009-12-17 Foschini G J Method for adaptive formation of cell clusters for cellular wireless networks with coordinated transmission and reception
US8310967B1 (en) 2008-06-19 2012-11-13 Marvell International Ltd. Infrastructure and ad-hoc node device
US8600324B1 (en) 2008-06-27 2013-12-03 Marvell International Ltd Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US20100011231A1 (en) 2008-07-11 2010-01-14 Raja Banerjea Access point rotation for sharing power load
US20100009675A1 (en) 2008-07-14 2010-01-14 Nokia Corporation Setup of device-to-device connection
US20100029325A1 (en) 2008-07-29 2010-02-04 Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Ab Apparatus and method to improve wlan performance in a dual wlan modality environment
US8078111B2 (en) 2008-07-29 2011-12-13 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus for using multiple frequency bands for communication
US8472968B1 (en) 2008-08-11 2013-06-25 Marvell International Ltd. Location-based detection of interference in cellular communications systems
US20100052796A1 (en) 2008-08-29 2010-03-04 Infineon Technologies Ag Device Having Digitally Controlled Oscillator
US20100135256A1 (en) 2008-09-04 2010-06-03 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for allocating multiple radio communication periods
US20100069112A1 (en) 2008-09-15 2010-03-18 Texas Instruments Incorporated Scheduling transmissions in coexisting wireless networks
US8150328B2 (en) 2008-09-17 2012-04-03 Motorola Solutions, Inc. Method and apparatus for distributed sensing management and control within a cognitive radio network
US20100080319A1 (en) 2008-09-30 2010-04-01 Thomas Blocher High Bandwidth Modulation and Transmission
US20100082957A1 (en) 2008-10-01 2010-04-01 Fujitsu Limited Information processing device
US8107391B2 (en) 2008-11-19 2012-01-31 Wi-Lan, Inc. Systems and etiquette for home gateways using white space
US20100130129A1 (en) 2008-11-25 2010-05-27 Jue Chang WLAN and bluetooth harmonization
US20100138549A1 (en) 2008-12-01 2010-06-03 Sandesh Goel Portable ap enhancements
US8081038B2 (en) 2008-12-22 2011-12-20 Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute Ring oscillator having wide frequency range
US20100165896A1 (en) 2008-12-31 2010-07-01 Michelle Xiaohong Gong Power saving in peer-to-peer communication devices
US20120213208A1 (en) 2009-03-06 2012-08-23 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for shared communication medium in wireless communication systems
US8254296B1 (en) 2009-03-19 2012-08-28 Marvell International Ltd. Peer-to-peer frequency band negotiation
US8472427B1 (en) 2009-04-06 2013-06-25 Marvell International Ltd. Packet exchange arbitration for coexisting radios
US8532041B1 (en) 2009-04-24 2013-09-10 Marvell International Ltd. Method for transmitting information in a regulated spectrum and network configured to operate in the regulated spectrum
US20120294396A1 (en) 2009-05-26 2012-11-22 Broadcom Corporation Direct detection of wireless interferers in a communication device for multiple modulation types
US8204015B2 (en) 2009-05-29 2012-06-19 Motorola Solutions, Inc. Method and apparatus for zone controller based dynamic spectrum allocation
US20100303026A1 (en) 2009-05-29 2010-12-02 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for zone controller based dynamic spectrum allocation
US20120327779A1 (en) 2009-06-12 2012-12-27 Cygnus Broadband, Inc. Systems and methods for congestion detection for use in prioritizing and scheduling packets in a communication network
US20100316027A1 (en) 2009-06-16 2010-12-16 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for dynamic and dual antenna bluetooth (bt)/wlan coexistence
US20100322213A1 (en) 2009-06-23 2010-12-23 Huaiyu Liu Service discovery in a wireless network
US20110007675A1 (en) 2009-07-09 2011-01-13 Mediatek Inc. System for the coexistence between a plurality of wireless communication module sharing single antenna
US20110009074A1 (en) 2009-07-09 2011-01-13 Mediatek Inc. Systems and methods for coexistence between plurality of wireless communications modules sharing single antenna
EP2299642A2 (en) 2009-09-14 2011-03-23 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft A method meeting the spectral mask in a radiofrequency identification system and a device therefor
US20110097998A1 (en) 2009-10-26 2011-04-28 Mediatek Inc. System and methods for enhancing coexistence efficiency for multi-radio terminals
US8626067B2 (en) 2009-10-26 2014-01-07 Mediatek Inc. System and methods for enhancing coexistence efficiency for multi-radio terminals
WO2011056878A1 (en) 2009-11-04 2011-05-12 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for peer discovery in a wireless communication network
US8340034B1 (en) 2009-11-11 2012-12-25 Marvell International Ltd. Bluetooth and wireless LAN arbitration
US20110161697A1 (en) 2009-12-24 2011-06-30 Qi Emily H Method and system for discoverability of power saving p2p devices
US8493992B2 (en) 2010-02-04 2013-07-23 Texas Instruments Incorporated Interrelated WiFi and USB protocols and other application framework processes, circuits and systems
US20110188391A1 (en) 2010-02-04 2011-08-04 Texas Instruments Incorporated INTERRELATED WiFi AND USB PROTOCOLS AND OTHER APPLICATION FRAMEWORK PROCESSES, CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS
US20110274040A1 (en) 2010-02-12 2011-11-10 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Method and apparatus for optimizing uplink random access channel transmission
US20130130684A1 (en) 2010-04-02 2013-05-23 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Group Procedures For Machine Typ Communication Devices
US8364188B2 (en) 2010-06-04 2013-01-29 Alcatel Lucent Method and controller for allocating whitespace spectrum
US20120025921A1 (en) 2010-07-31 2012-02-02 Quintic Holdings Low Noise VCO Circuit Having Low Noise Bias
US20120087341A1 (en) 2010-10-11 2012-04-12 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. In-device interference avoidance method and apparatus for terminal equipped with multiple communication modules
US20120099476A1 (en) 2010-10-20 2012-04-26 Brian Mahaffy Pre-Association Discovery
EP2456275A1 (en) 2010-11-22 2012-05-23 Inside Secure Radiocommunication device comprising an UHF tag reader
US20120213162A1 (en) 2011-02-18 2012-08-23 Changhoi Koo Method and Apparatus for Avoiding In-Device Coexistence Interference with Preferred Frequency Notification
US20120244805A1 (en) 2011-03-21 2012-09-27 Nokia Corporation Method and apparatus for battery with secure element
US20120276938A1 (en) 2011-04-29 2012-11-01 Sarang Shrikrishna Wagholikar Multi-technology coexistence for ibss networks
US8655278B2 (en) 2011-06-20 2014-02-18 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Band steering
WO2013104989A2 (en) 2012-01-09 2013-07-18 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Methods and apparatus for establishing a tunneled direct link setup (tdls) session between devices in a wireless network
US20130176903A1 (en) 2012-01-09 2013-07-11 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Methods and Apparatus for Establishing a Tunneled Direct Link Setup (TDLS) Session Between Devices in a Wireless Network
WO2013119810A1 (en) 2012-02-07 2013-08-15 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-network communication
US20140044106A1 (en) 2012-02-07 2014-02-13 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Method and Apparatus for Multi-Network Communication
US20130225068A1 (en) 2012-02-24 2013-08-29 Nokia Corporation Method, apparatus, and computer program product for coexistence-aware communication mechanism for multi-radios
US20140004794A1 (en) 2012-07-02 2014-01-02 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Shaping Near-Field Transmission Signals
US20140043966A1 (en) 2012-08-07 2014-02-13 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for data traffic offloading and apparatus using the same

Non-Patent Citations (120)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network; Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Radio Resource Control (RRC); Protocol Specification (Release 10)", 3GPP TS 36.331; V10.5.0; 3GPP Organizational Partners, 2012, 302 pages.
"Advisory Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,251, Dec. 7, 2011, 3 pages.
"Advisory Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,721, Aug. 13, 2013, 3 pages.
"Draft Standard for Information Technology-Telecommunications and information exchange between systems-Local and metropolitan area networks-Specific requirements", IEEE P802.11s/D1.03, Apr. 2007, 251 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/186,429, Oct. 13, 2011, 23 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,251, Sep. 13, 2011, 15 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/323,292, Aug. 24, 2012, 26 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Feb. 17, 2012, 26 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Mar. 18, 2013, 12 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/484,563, Apr. 24, 2012, 18 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/487,425, May 3, 2012, 9 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/534,361, Feb. 29, 2012, 13 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/542,845, Sep. 25, 2012, 23 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/616,454, Apr. 11, 2012, 19 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,721, Jun. 6, 2013, 16 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,802, Nov. 15, 2012, 15 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, Feb. 25, 2013, 11 pages.
"Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/883,054, Jun. 9, 2014, 22 pages.
"Foreign Notice of Allowance", Japanese Application No. 2011-513586, Jul. 16, 2013, 2 pages.
"Foreign Office Action", CN Application No. 200980122587.0, Feb. 21, 2013, 17 pages.
"Foreign Office Action", CN Application No. 200980122587.0, Sep. 10, 2013, 11 Pages.
"Foreign Office Action", EP Application No. 09789754.0, May 17, 2011, 8 pages.
"Foreign Office Action", European Patent Application No. 09789754.0, Jul. 12, 2012, 4 pages.
"Foreign Office Action", European Patent Application No. 09789754.0, Mar. 11, 2013, 4 Pages.
"Foreign Office Action", Japanese Application No. 2011-513586, Apr. 9, 2013, 4 Pages.
"Foreign Office Action", Japanese Application No. 2011-513586, Oct. 23, 2012, 7 pages.
"Further Higher Data Rate Extension in the 2.4 GHz Band", IEEE P802.11g/D8.2, DRAFT Supplement to Standard [for] Information Technology, Apr. 2003, 69 pages.
"IEEE Standard for Information Technology-Telecommunications and information exchange between systems-Local and metropolitan area networks-Specific requirements Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications Amendment", IEEE Computer Society, Oct. 14, 2010, pp. 12-18, 23, 65-68.
"Information Technology-Telecommunications and Information Exchange Between systems-Local and Metropolitan Area Networks-Specific Requirements", IEEE Standard, Aug. 1, 2005, pp. 1-60.
"Information Technology-Telecommunications and Information Exchange between Systems-Local and Metropolitan Area Networks-Specific Requirements", Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications, IEEE Standard 802.11h-2003 (Amendment to IEEE Std 802.11-1993),Oct. 14, 2003, 80 pages.
"International Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/IB2013/001962, Feb. 6, 2014, 11 Pages.
"International Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/US2009/046289, Oct. 29, 2009, 13 pages.
"International Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/US2012/035597, Aug. 6, 2012, 13 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/167,841, Jul. 15, 2011, 10 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/186,429, Apr. 25, 2011, 19 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,240, Jan. 6, 2012, 7 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,251, Mar. 29, 2011, 8 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,251, Mar. 29, 2012, 11 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/235,333, Jun. 28, 2011, 16 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/323,292, Dec. 21, 2011, 17 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Aug. 20, 2012, 33 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Sep. 6, 2011, 24 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/478,446, Dec. 28, 2011, 17 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/484,563, Oct. 4, 2011, 13 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/487,425, Jan. 12, 2012, 7 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/534,361, Oct. 12, 2011, 11 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/542,845, Apr. 4, 2012, 19 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/542,845, Oct. 23, 2013, 29 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/616,454, Dec. 22, 2011, 8 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,721, May 10, 2012, 15 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,721, Nov. 7, 2012, 15 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/646,802, Mar. 29, 2012, 16 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/732,036, Aug. 9, 2012, 13 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, Oct. 4, 2012, 13 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/883,054, Nov. 22, 2013, 18 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 12/883,054, Sep. 11, 2014, 29 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/099,169, Mar. 28, 2013, 12 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/099,169, Oct. 4, 2013, 9 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/249,740, Mar. 26, 2013, 9 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/249,740, Oct. 16, 2013, 9 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/429,090, Oct. 24, 2013, 13 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/458,227, Jul. 3, 2014, 10 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/479,124, Sep. 27, 2013, 14 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/536,506, Apr. 25, 2014, 12 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/604,563, Apr. 5, 2013, 6 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/622,916, Sep. 10, 2014, 10 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,482, Mar. 19, 2013, 19 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,502, Feb. 21, 2013, 6 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/757,276, Jan. 30, 2014, 9 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/911,979, Jan. 31, 2014, 19 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 13/911,979, Jun. 9, 2014, 11 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 14/063,972, Sep. 24, 2014, 6 pages.
"Non-Final Office Action", U.S. Appl. No. 14/082,981, Aug. 4, 2014, 6 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/167,841, Nov. 25, 2011, 11 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/186,429, Jun. 6, 2013, 9 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,240, May 16, 2012, 4 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/190,251, Oct. 4, 2012, 6 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/235,333, Nov. 15, 2011, 5 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/323,292, Jun. 28, 2013, 8 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Jul. 1, 2013, 8 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/478,446, Jun. 14, 2012, 6 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/484,563, Jul. 9, 2012, 6 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/487,425, Jul. 26, 2013, 9 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/534,361, Feb. 14, 2013, 12 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/616,454, Aug. 22, 2012, 4 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/716,569, Apr. 19, 2012, 7 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/732,036, Feb. 21, 2013, 8 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, May 3, 2013, 9 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/536,506, Sep. 19, 2014, 7 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/604,563, Sep. 26, 2013, 5 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,482, Sep. 3, 2013, 8 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,502, Jun. 25, 2013, 11 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/757,276, Jul. 8, 2014, 6 pages.
"Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 14/063,972, Nov. 7, 2014, 8 pages.
"Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications", IEEE Std 802.11a-1999, High-speed Physical Layer in the 5 GHz Band, 1999, 91 pages.
"Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications", IEEE Std 802.11b-1999/Cor 1-2001, Amendment 2: Higher-speed Physical Layer (PHY) extension in the 2.4 GHz band, Nov. 7, 2001, 23 pages.
"Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications", Information technology-Telecommunications and information exchange between systems-Local and metropolitan area networks-Specific requirements-, IEEE, Apr. 2003, pp. 1-69.
"PCT Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/IB2013/000390, Aug. 21, 2013, 19 Pages.
"PCT Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/US2011/054358, Dec. 16, 2011, 13 pages.
"PCT Search Report and Written Opinion", Application No. PCT/US2013/025144, Jun. 5, 2013, 10 pages.
"Restriction Requirement", U.S. Appl. No. 12/167,841, Aug. 12, 2011, 6 pages.
"Search Report", European Application No. 13169350.9, Aug. 13, 2013, 10 Pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/186,429, Jul. 10, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/323,292, Oct. 17, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/323,292, Oct. 7, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/358,955, Oct. 11, 2013, 3 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/716,569, Jul. 23, 2012, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, Aug. 14, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, Jun. 18, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 12/759,336, Jun. 5, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,482, Dec. 19, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/656,482, Nov. 29, 2013, 2 pages.
"Supplemental Notice of Allowance", U.S. Appl. No. 13/757,276, Oct. 24, 2014, 2 pages.
Haas, et al., "Gossip-Based Ad Hoc Routing", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, vol. 14, No. 3, Jun. 2006, pp. 479-491.
Jung, et al., "A Power Control MAC Protocol for Ad Hoc Networks", In Proceedings of MOBICOM 2002, Sep. 23, 2002, pp. 36-47.
Jung, et al., "A Power Control MAC Protocol for Ad Hoc Networks", Wireless Networks; The Journal of Mobile Communication, Computation and Information, Kluwer Academic Publishers vol. 11, No. 1-2, Jan. 1, 2005, 12 Pages.
Mazzanti, et al., "Analysis and Design of Injection-Locked LC Dividers for Quadrature Generation", IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 39, No. 9, Sep. 2004, pp. 1425-1433.
Mujtaba, "TGn Sync Proposal Technical Specification", IEEE 802.11-04/0889r6, This document presents the technical specification for the MAC and the PHY layer of the TGn Sync proposal to IEEE 802.11 TGn,May 18, 2005, pp. 1-131.
Qiao, et al., "Interference Analysis and Transmit Power Control in IEEE 802.11a/h Wireless LANs", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, IEEE/ACM, New York, NY, US, vol. 15. No. 5, Oct. 1, 2007, 14 Pages.
Tinnirello, et al.,' "Revisit of RTS / CTS Exchange in High-Speed IEEE 802.11 Networks", World of Wireless Mobile and Multimedia Networks. 2005. Wowmom 2005. Sixth IEEE International Symposium on a Taormina-Giardini Naxos, Italy Jun. 13-16, 2005 Piscataway, NJ, USA,IEEE, Los Alamitos, CA, USA, Jun. 13, 2005, 10 Pages.

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9401737B1 (en) 2007-09-21 2016-07-26 Marvell International Ltd. Circuits and methods for generating oscillating signals
US9148200B1 (en) 2007-12-11 2015-09-29 Marvell International Ltd. Determining power over ethernet impairment
US8989669B2 (en) 2008-06-16 2015-03-24 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Short-range wireless communication
US9055460B1 (en) 2008-08-11 2015-06-09 Marvell International Ltd. Location-based detection of interference in cellular communications systems
US9066369B1 (en) 2009-09-16 2015-06-23 Marvell International Ltd. Coexisting radio communication
US8983557B1 (en) 2011-06-30 2015-03-17 Marvell International Ltd. Reducing power consumption of a multi-antenna transceiver
US9125216B1 (en) 2011-09-28 2015-09-01 Marvell International Ltd. Method and apparatus for avoiding interference among multiple radios
US9215708B2 (en) 2012-02-07 2015-12-15 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-network communication
US9450649B2 (en) 2012-07-02 2016-09-20 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Shaping near-field transmission signals

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US8600324B1 (en) 2013-12-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8923788B1 (en) Circuit and method for adjusting a digitally controlled oscillator
US7551688B2 (en) Waveforms for envelope tracking transmitter
US8324969B2 (en) Delta-sigma modulator approach to increased amplifier gain resolution
US8874050B1 (en) Saturation correction without using saturation detection and saturation prevention for a power amplifier
US7450916B1 (en) Excess current and saturation detection and correction in a power amplifier
US7460890B2 (en) Bi-modal RF architecture for low power devices
JP2004503163A (en) Automatic gain control circuit
JP2003500873A (en) Power modulator and method for separately amplifying high and low frequency parts of amplitude waveform
JP2001503929A (en) Mixed signal processor for oversampled noise shaping
US20070001880A1 (en) Gain compensation
US8934858B2 (en) Digital demodulation circuit using automatic gain control circuit having temperature compensation function
US7333781B1 (en) Power correction loop for a power amplifier
WO2008002225A1 (en) Switched mode power amplification
JP2003526979A (en) Digital-to-analog conversion interface circuit with adjustable time response
US8737449B2 (en) Frequency hopping receiver circuit
US20090117868A1 (en) Fast Settling Radio Receiver Automatic Gain Control System
US7400194B2 (en) Method of amplifying a digital signal and device therefor
US9007245B2 (en) Semiconductor device having Analog-to-Digital Converter with gain-dependent dithering and communication apparatus
US9831884B2 (en) Adaptive configuration to achieve low noise and low distortion in an analog system
JP2005524325A (en) Digital automatic gain control for transceivers
JP2000236286A (en) Communication device
EP2693632B1 (en) Amplifier and audio device provided with amplifier
JP3326150B2 (en) Wireless communication device
US20070126522A1 (en) Control for communication systems transmitting and receiving signals with substantially no sidebands
JP6801791B2 (en) RF signal generator and RF signal generation method

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1551)

Year of fee payment: 4

AS Assignment

Owner name: CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL, CAYMAN ISLANDS

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:MARVELL INTERNATIONAL LTD.;REEL/FRAME:052918/0001

Effective date: 20191231

AS Assignment

Owner name: MARVELL ASIA PTE, LTD., SINGAPORE

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL;REEL/FRAME:053475/0001

Effective date: 20191231

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 8TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1552); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 8